His hands were shaking as he exhibited
the gifts. If he were on Earth, he would be certain
it was the flu; in the Centaurus system, kranken.
But this was Van Daamas, so Lee Bolden couldn’t
say what he had. Man hadn’t been here long
enough to investigate the diseases with any degree
of thoroughness. There were always different hazards
to overcome as new planets were settled.
But whatever infection he had, Bolden
was not greatly concerned as he counted out the gifts.
He had felt the onset of illness perhaps an hour before.
When he got back to the settlement he’d be taken
care of. That was half a day’s flight from
here. The base was equipped with the best medical
facilities that had been devised.
He stacked up the gifts to make an
impressive show: five pairs of radar goggles,
seven high-velocity carbines, seven boxes of ammunition.
This was the natives’ own rule and was never
to be disregarded it had to be an odd number
of gifts.
The Van Daamas native gazed impassively
at the heap. He carried a rather strange bow
and a quiver was strapped to his thigh. With one
exception, the arrows were brightly colored, mostly
red and yellow. Bolden supposed this was for
easy recovery in case the shot missed. But there
was always one arrow that was stained dark blue.
Bolden had observed this before no native
was ever without that one somber-looking arrow.
The man of Van Daamas stood there
and the thin robe that was no protection against the
elements rippled slightly in the chill current of
air that flowed down the mountainside. “I
will go talk with the others,” he said in English.
“Go talk,” said Bolden,
trying not to shiver. He replied in native speech,
but a few words exhausted his knowledge and he had
to revert to his own language. “Take the
gifts with you. They are yours, no matter what
you decide.”
The native nodded and reached for
a pair of goggles. He tried them on, looking
out over fog and mist-shrouded slopes. These people
of Van Daamas needed radar less than any race Bolden
knew of. Living by preference in mountains, they
had developed a keenness of vision that enabled them
to see through the perpetual fog and mist far better
than any Earthman. Paradoxically it was the goggles
they appreciated most. Extending their sight
seemed more precious to them than powerful carbines.
The native shoved the goggles up on
his forehead, smiling with pleasure. Noticing
that Bolden was shivering, he took his hands and examined
them. “Hands sick?” he queried.
“A little,” said Bolden.
“I’ll be all right in the morning.”
The native gathered up the gifts.
“Go talk,” he repeated as he went away.
Lee Bolden sat in the copter and waited.
He didn’t know how much influence this native
had with his people. He had come to negotiate,
but this might have been because he understood English
somewhat better than the others.
A council of the natives would make
the decision about working for the Earthmen’s
settlement. If they approved of the gifts, they
probably would. There was nothing to do now but
wait and shiver. His hands were getting
numb and his feet weren’t much better.
Presently the native came out of the
fog carrying a rectangular wicker basket. Bolden
was depressed when he saw it. One gift in return
for goggles, carbines, ammunition. The rate of
exchange was not favorable. Neither would the
reply be.
The man set the basket down and waited
for Bolden to speak. “The people have talked?”
asked Bolden.
“We have talked to come,”
said the native, holding out his fingers. “In
five or seven days, we come.”
It was a surprise, a pleasant one.
Did one wicker basket equal so many fine products
of superlative technology? Apparently it did.
The natives had different values. To them, one
pair of goggles was worth more than three carbines,
a package of needles easily the equivalent of a box
of ammunition.
“It’s good you will come.
I will leave at once to tell them at the settlement,”
said Bolden. There was something moving in the
basket, but the weave was close and he couldn’t
see through it.
“Stay,” the man advised.
“A storm blows through the mountains.”
“I will fly around the storm,” said Bolden.
If he hadn’t been sick he might
have accepted the offer. But he had to get back
to the settlement for treatment. On a strange
planet you never could tell what might develop from
a seemingly minor ailment. Besides he’d
already been gone two days searching for this tribe
in the interminable fog that hung over the mountains.
Those waiting at the base would want him back as soon
as he could get there.
“Fly far around,” said
the man. “It is a big storm.”
He took up the basket and held it level with the cabin,
opening the top. An animal squirmed out and disappeared
inside.
Bolden looked askance at the eyes
that glowed in the dim interior. He hadn’t
seen clearly what the creature was and he didn’t
like the idea of having it loose in the cabin, particularly
if he had to fly through a storm. The man should
have left it in the basket. But the basket plus
the animal would have been two gifts and
the natives never considered anything in even numbers.
“It will not hurt,” said the man.
“A gentle pet.”
As far as he knew, there were no pets
and very few domesticated animals. Bolden snapped
on the cabin light. It was one of those mysterious
creatures every tribe kept in cages near the outskirts
of their camps. What they did with them no one
knew and the natives either found it impossible to
explain or did not care to do so.
It seemed unlikely that the creatures
were used for food and certainly they were not work
animals. And in spite of what this man said, they
were not pets either. No Earthman had ever seen
a native touch them nor had the creatures ever been
seen wandering at large in the camp. And until
now, none had been permitted to pass into Earth’s
possession. The scientists at the settlement
would regard this acquisition with delight.
“Touch it,” said the native.
Bolden held out his trembling hand
and the animal came to him with alert and friendly
yellow eyes. It was about the size of a rather
small dog, but it didn’t look much like one.
It resembled more closely a tiny slender bear with
a glossy and shaggy cinnamon coat. Bolden ran
his hands through the clean-smelling fur and the touch
warmed his fingers. The animal squirmed and licked
his fingers.
“It has got your taste,”
said the native. “Be all right now.
It is yours.” He turned and walked into
the mist.
Bolden got in and started the motors
while the animal climbed into the seat beside him.
It was a friendly thing and he couldn’t understand
why the natives always kept it caged.
He headed straight up, looking for
a way over the mountains to avoid the impending storm.
Fog made it difficult to tell where the peaks were
and he had to drop lower, following meandering valleys.
He flew as swiftly as limited visibility would allow,
but he hadn’t gone far when the storm broke.
He tried to go over the top of it, but this storm seemed
to have no top. The region was incompletely mapped
and even radar wasn’t much help in the tremendous
electrical display that raged around the ship.
His arms ached as he clung to the
controls. His hands weren’t actually cold,
they were numb. His legs were leaden. The
creature crept closer to him and he had to nudge it
away. Momentarily the distraction cleared his
head. He couldn’t put it off any longer.
He had to land and wait out the storm if
he could find a place to land.
Flexing his hands until he worked
some feeling into them, he inched the ship lower.
A canyon wall loomed at one side and he had to veer
away and keep on looking.
Eventually he found his refuge a
narrow valley where the force of the winds was not
extreme and he set the land anchor.
Unless something drastic happened, it would hold.
He made the seat into a bed, decided
he was too tired to eat, and went directly to sleep.
When he awakened, the storm was still raging and the
little animal was snoozing by his side.
He felt well enough to eat. The
native hadn’t explained what the animal should
be fed, but it accepted everything Bolden offered.
Apparently it was as omnivorous as Man. Before
lying down again, he made the other seat into a bed,
although it didn’t seem to matter. The creature
preferred being as close to him as it could get and
he didn’t object. The warmth was comforting.
Alternately dozing and waking he waited
out the storm. It lasted a day and a half.
Finally the sun was shining. This was two days
since he had first fallen ill, four days after leaving
the settlement.
Bolden felt much improved. His
hands were nearly normal and his vision wasn’t
blurred. He looked at the little animal curled
in his lap, gazing up at him with solemn yellow eyes.
If he gave it encouragement it would probably be crawling
all over him. However, he couldn’t have
it frisking around while he was flying. “Come,
Pet,” he said there wasn’t anything
else to call it “you’re going
places.”
Picking it up, half-carrying and half-dragging
it, he took it to the rear of the compartment, improvising
a narrow cage back there. He was satisfied it
would hold. He should have done this in the beginning.
Of course he hadn’t felt like it then and he
hadn’t had the time and anyway the
native would have resented such treatment of a gift.
Probably it was best he had waited.
His pet didn’t like confinement.
It whined softly for a while. The noise stopped
when the motors roared. Bolden headed straight
up, until he was high enough to establish communication
over the peaks. He made a brief report about
the natives’ agreement and his own illness, then
he started home.
He flew at top speed for ten hours.
He satisfied his hunger by nibbling concentrated rations
from time to time. The animal whined occasionally,
but Bolden had learned to identify the sounds it made.
It was neither hungry nor thirsty. It merely
wanted to be near him. And all he wanted was
to reach the base.
The raw sprawling settlement looked
good as he sat the copter down. Mechanics came
running from the hangars. They opened the door
and he stepped out.
And fell on his face. There was
no feeling in his hands and none in his legs.
He hadn’t recovered.
Doctor Kessler peered at him through
the microscreen. It gave his face a narrow insubstantial
appearance. The microscreen was a hemispherical
force field enclosing his head. It originated
in a tubular circlet that snapped around his throat
at the top of the decontagion suit. The field
killed all microlife that passed through it or came
in contact with it. The decontagion suit was
non-porous and impermeable, covering completely the
rest of his body. The material was thinner over
his hands and thicker at the soles.
Bolden took in the details at a glance.
“Is it serious?” he asked, his voice cracking
with the effort.
“Merely a precaution,”
said the doctor hollowly. The microscreen distorted
sound as well as sight. “Merely a precaution.
We know what it is, but we’re not sure of the
best way to treat it.”
Bolden grunted to himself. The
microscreen and decontagion suit were strong precautions.
The doctor wheeled a small machine
from the wall and placed Bolden’s hand in a
narrow trough that held it steady. The eyepiece
slid into the microscreen and, starting at the finger
tips, Kessler examined the arm, traveling slowly upward.
At last he stopped. “Is this where feeling
ends?”
“I think so. Touch it. Yeah.
It’s dead below there.”
“Good. Then we’ve got it pegged.
It’s the Bubble Death.”
Bolden showed concern and the doctor
laughed. “Don’t worry. It’s
called that because of the way it looks through the
X-ray microscope. It’s true that it killed
the scouting expedition that discovered the planet,
but it won’t get you.”
“They had antibiotics. Neobiotics, too.”
“Sure. But they had only
a few standard kinds. Their knowledge was more
limited and they lacked the equipment we now have.”
The doctor made it sound comforting.
But Bolden wasn’t comforted. Not just yet.
“Sit up and take a look,”
said Kessler, bending the eyepiece around so Bolden
could use it. “The dark filamented lines
are nerves. See what surrounds them?”
Bolden watched as the doctor adjusted
the focus for him. Each filament was covered
with countless tiny spheres that isolated and insulated
the nerve from contact. That’s why he couldn’t
feel anything. The spherical microbes did look
like bubbles. As yet they didn’t seem to
have attacked the nerves directly.
While he watched, the doctor swiveled
out another eyepiece for his own use and turned a
knob on the side of the machine. From the lens
next to his arm an almost invisible needle slid out
and entered his flesh. Bolden could see it come
into the field of view. It didn’t hurt.
Slowly it approached the dark branching filament,
never quite touching it.
The needle was hollow and as Kessler
squeezed the knob it sucked in the spheres. The
needle extended a snout which crept along the nerve,
vacuuming in microbes as it moved. When a section
had been cleansed, the snout was retracted. Bolden
could feel the needle then.
When the doctor finished, he laid
Bolden’s hand back at his side and wheeled the
machine to the wall, extracting a small capsule which
he dropped into a slot that led to the outside.
He came back and sat down.
“Is that what you’re going
to do?” asked Bolden. “Scrape them
off?”
“Hardly. There are too
many nerves. If we had ten machines and enough
people to operate them, we might check the advance
in one arm. That’s all.” The
doctor leaned back in the chair. “No.
I was collecting a few more samples. We’re
trying to find out what the microbes react to.”
“More samples? Then you must have
taken others.”
“Certainly. We put you
out for a while to let you rest.” The chair
came down on four legs. “You’ve got
a mild case. Either that or you have a strong
natural immunity. It’s now been three days
since you reported the first symptoms and it isn’t
very advanced. It killed the entire scouting
expedition in less time than that.”
Bolden looked at the ceiling.
Eventually they’d find a cure. But would
he be alive that long?
“I suspect what you’re
thinking,” said the doctor. “Don’t
overlook our special equipment. We already have
specimens in the sonic accelerator. We’ve
been able to speed up the life processes of the microbes
about ten times. Before the day is over we’ll
know which of our anti and neobiotics they like the
least. Tough little things so far unbelievably
tough but you can be sure we’ll smack
them.”
His mind was active, but outwardly
Bolden was quiescent as the doctor continued his explanation.
The disease attacked the superficial
nervous system, beginning with the extremities.
The bodies of the crew of the scouting expedition had
been in an advanced state of decomposition when the
medical rescue team reached them and the microbes
were no longer active. Nevertheless it was a
reasonable supposition that death had come shortly
after the invading bacteria had reached the brain.
Until then, though nerves were the route along which
the microbes traveled, no irreparable damage had been
done.
This much was good news. Either
he would recover completely or he would die.
He would not be crippled permanently. Another
factor in his favor was the sonic accelerator.
By finding the natural resonance of the one-celled
creature and gradually increasing the tempo of the
sound field, the doctor could grow and test ten generations
in the laboratory while one generation was breeding
in the body. Bolden was the first patient actually
being observed with the disease, but the time element
wasn’t as bad as he had thought.
“That’s where you are,”
concluded Kessler. “Now, among other things,
we’ve got to find where you’ve been.”
“The ship has an automatic log,”
said Bolden. “It indicates every place
I landed.”
“True, but our grid coordinates
are not exact. It will be a few years before
we’re able to look at a log and locate within
ten feet of where a ship has been.” The
doctor spread out a large photomap. There were
several marks on it. He fastened a stereoscope
viewer over Bolden’s eyes and handed him a pencil.
“Can you use this?”
“I think so.” His
fingers were stiff and he couldn’t feel, but
he could mark with the pencil. Kessler moved
the map nearer and the terrain sprang up in detail.
In some cases, he could see it more clearly than when
he had been there, because on the map there was no
fog. Bolden made a few corrections and the doctor
took the map away and removed the viewer.
“We’ll have to stay away
from these places until we get a cure. Did you
notice anything peculiar in any of the places you went?”
“It was all mountainous country.”
“Which probably means that we’re
safe on the plain. Were there any animals?”
“Nothing that came close. Birds maybe.”
“More likely it was an insect.
Well, we’ll worry about the host and how it
is transmitted. Try not to be upset. You’re
as safe as you would be on Earth.”
“Yeah,” said Bolden. “Where’s
the pet?”
The doctor laughed. “You
did very well on that one. The biologists have
been curious about the animal since the day they saw
one in a native camp.”
“They can look at it
as much as they want,” said Bolden. “Nothing
more on this one, though. It’s a personal
gift.”
“You’re sure it’s personal?”
“The native said it was.”
The doctor sighed. “I’ll
tell them. They won’t like it, but we can’t
argue with the natives if we want their cooperation.”
Bolden smiled. The animal was
safe for at least six months. He could understand
the biologists’ curiosity, but there was enough
to keep them curious for a long time on a new planet.
And it was his. In a remarkably short time, he
had become attached to it. It was one of those
rare things that Man happened across occasionally about
once in every five planets. Useless, completely
useless, the creature had one virtue. It liked
Man and Man liked it. It was a pet. “Okay,”
he said. “But you didn’t tell me
where it is.”
The doctor shrugged, but the gesture
was lost in the shapeless decontagion suit. “Do
you think we’re letting it run in the streets?
It’s in the next room, under observation.”
The doctor was more concerned than
he was letting on. The hospital was small and
animals were never kept in it. “It’s
not the carrier. I was sick before it was given
to me.”
“You had something, we know
that much, but was it this? Even granting that
you’re right, it was in contact with you and
may now be infected.”
“I think life on this planet
isn’t bothered by the disease. The natives
have been every place I went and none of them seemed
to have it.”
“Didn’t they?” said
the doctor, going to the door. “Maybe.
It’s too early to say.” He reeled
a cord out of the wall and plugged it into the decontagion
suit. He spread his legs and held his arms away
from his sides. In an instant, the suit glowed
white hot. Only for an instant, and it was insulated
inside. Even so it must be uncomfortable and
the process would be repeated outside. The doctor
wasn’t taking any chances. “Try to
sleep,” he said. “Ring if there’s
a change in your condition even if you
think it’s insignificant.”
“I’ll ring,” said
Bolden. In a short time he fell asleep. It
was easy to sleep.
The nurse entered as quietly as she
could in the decontagion outfit. It awakened
Bolden. It was evening. He had slept most
of the day. “Which one are you?”
he asked. “The pretty one?”
“All nurses are pretty if you
get well. Here. Swallow this.”
It was Peggy. He looked doubtfully
at what she held out. “All of it?”
“Certainly. You get it
down and I’ll see that it comes back up.
The string won’t hurt you.”
She passed a small instrument over
his body, reading the dial she held in the other hand.
The information, he knew, was being recorded elsewhere
on a master chart. Apparently the instrument measured
neural currents and hence indirectly the progress
of the disease. Already they had evolved new
diagnostic techniques. He wished they’d
made the same advance in treatment.
After expertly reeling out the instrument
he had swallowed, the nurse read it and deposited
it in a receptacle in the wall. She brought a
tray and told him to eat. He wanted to question
her, but she was insistent about it so he ate.
Allowance had been made for his partial paralysis.
The food was liquid. It was probably nutritious,
but he didn’t care for the taste.
She took the tray away and came back
and sat beside him. “Now we can talk,”
she said.
“What’s going on?”
he said bluntly. “When do I start getting
shots? Nothing’s been done for me so far.”
“I don’t know what the
doctor’s working out for you. I’m
just the nurse.”
“Don’t try to tell me
that,” he said. “You’re a doctor
yourself. In a pinch you could take Kessler’s
place.”
“And I get my share of pinches,”
she said brightly. “Okay, so I’m a
doctor, but only on Earth. Until I complete my
off-planet internship here, I’m not allowed
to practice.”
“You know as much about Van Daamas as anyone
does.”
“That may be,” she said.
“Now don’t be alarmed, but the truth ought
to be obvious. None of our anti or neobiotics
or combinations of them have a positive effect.
We’re looking for something new.”
It should have been obvious; he had
been hoping against that, though. He looked at
the shapeless figure sitting beside him and remembered
Peggy as she usually looked. He wondered if they
were any longer concerned with him as an individual.
They must be working mainly to keep the disease from
spreading. “What are my chances?”
“Better than you think.
We’re looking for an additive that will make
the biotics effective.”
He hadn’t thought of that, though
it was often used, particularly on newly settled planets.
He had heard of a virus infection common to Centaurus
that could be completely controlled by a shot of neobiotics
plus aspirin, though separately neither was of any
value. But the discovery of what substance should
be added to what antibiotic was largely one of trial
and error. That took time and there wasn’t
much time. “What else?” he said.
“That’s about it.
We’re not trying to make you believe this isn’t
serious. But don’t forget we’re working
ten times as fast as the disease can multiply.
We expect a break any moment.” She got up.
“Want a sedative for the night?”
“I’ve got a sedative inside
me. Looks like it will be permanent.”
“That’s what I like about
you, you’re so cheerful,” she said, leaning
over and clipping something around his throat.
“In case you’re wondering, we’re
going to be busy tonight checking the microbe.
We can put someone in with you, but we thought you’d
rather have all of us working on it.”
“Sure,” he said.
“This is a body monitor.
If you want anything just call and we’ll be
here within minutes.”
“Thanks,” he said. “I won’t
panic tonight.”
She plugged in the decontagion uniform,
flashed it on and then left the room. After she
was gone, the body monitor no longer seemed reassuring.
It was going to take something positive to pull him
through.
They were going to work through the
night, but did they actually hope for success.
What had Peggy said? None of the anti or neobiotics
had a positive reaction. Unknowingly she had
let it slip. The reaction was negative; the bubble
microbes actually grew faster in the medium that was
supposed to stop them. It happened occasionally
on strange planets. It was his bad luck that
it was happening to him.
He pushed the thoughts out of his
mind and tried to sleep. He did for a time.
When he awakened he thought, at first, it was his arms
that had aroused him. They seemed to be on fire,
deep inside. To a limited extent, he still had
control. He could move them though there was no
surface sensation. Interior nerves had not been
greatly affected until now. But outside the infection
had crept up. It was no longer just above the
wrists. It had reached his elbows and passed beyond.
A few inches below his shoulder he could feel nothing.
The illness was accelerating. If they had ever
thought of amputation, it was too late, now.
He resisted an impulse to cry out.
A nurse would come and sit beside him, but he would
be taking her from work that might save his life.
The infection would reach his shoulders and move across
his chest and back. It would travel up his throat
and he wouldn’t be able to move his lips.
It would paralyze his eyelids so that he couldn’t
blink. Maybe it would blind him, too. And
then it would find ingress to his brain.
The result would be a metabolic explosion.
Swiftly each bodily function would stop altogether
or race wildly as the central nervous system was invaded,
one regulatory center after the other blanking out.
His body would be aflame or it would smolder and flicker
out. Death might be spectacular or it could come
very quietly.
That was one reason he didn’t call the nurse.
The other was the noise.
It was a low sound, half purr, half
a coaxing growl. It was the animal the native
had given him, confined in the next room. Bolden
was not sure why he did what he did next. Instinct
or reason may have governed his actions. But
instinct and reason are divisive concepts that cannot
apply to the human mind, which is actually indivisible.
He got out of bed. Unable to
stand, he rolled to the floor. He couldn’t
crawl very well because his hands wouldn’t support
his weight so he crept along on his knees and elbows.
It didn’t hurt. Nothing hurt except the
fire in his bones. He reached the door and straightened
up on his knees. He raised his hand to the handle,
but couldn’t grasp it. After several trials,
he abandoned the attempt and hooked his chin on the
handle, pulling it down. The door opened and he
was in the next room. The animal was whining
louder now that he was near. Yellow eyes glowed
at him from the corner. He crept to the cage.
It was latched. The animal shivered
eagerly, pressing against the side, striving to reach
him. His hands were numb and he couldn’t
work the latch. The animal licked his fingers.
It was easier after that. He
couldn’t feel what he was doing, but somehow
he managed to unlatch it. The door swung open
and the animal bounded out, knocking him to the floor.
He didn’t mind at all because
now he was sure he was right. The natives had
given him the animal for a purpose. Their own
existence was meager, near the edge of extinction.
They could not afford to keep something that wasn’t
useful. And this creature was useful. Tiny
blue sparks crackled from the fur as it rubbed against
him in the darkness. It was not whining.
It rumbled and purred as it licked his hands and arms
and rolled against his legs.
After a while he was strong enough
to crawl back to bed, leaning against the animal for
support. He lifted himself up and fell across
the bed in exhaustion. Blood didn’t circulate
well in his crippled body. The animal bounded
up and tried to melt itself into his body. He
couldn’t push it away if he wanted. He
didn’t want to. He stirred and got himself
into a more comfortable position. He wasn’t
going to die.
In the morning, Bolden was awake long
before the doctor came in. Kessler’s face
was haggard and the smile was something he assumed
solely for the patient’s benefit. If he
could have seen what the expression looked like after
filtering through the microscreen, he would have abandoned
it. “I see you’re holding your own,”
he said with hollow cheerfulness. “We’re
doing quite well ourselves.”
“I’ll bet,” said
Bolden. “Maybe you’ve got to the point
where one of the antibiotics doesn’t actually
stimulate the growth of the microbes?”
“I was afraid you’d find
it out,” sighed the doctor. “We can’t
keep everything from you.”
“You could have given me a shot
of plasma and said it was a powerful new drug.”
“That idea went out of medical
treatment a couple of hundred years ago,” said
the doctor. “You’d feel worse when
you failed to show improvement. Settling a planet
isn’t easy and the dangers aren’t imaginary.
You’ve got to be able to face facts as they
come.”
He peered uncertainly at Bolden.
The microscreen distorted his vision, too. “We’re
making progress though it may not seem so to you.
When a mixture of a calcium salt plus two antihistamines
is added to a certain neobiotic, the result is that
the microbe grows no faster than it should. Switching
the ingredients here and there maybe it
ought to be a potassium salt and the first
thing you know we’ll have it stopped cold.”
“I doubt the effectiveness of
those results,” said Bolden. “In fact,
I think you’re on the wrong track. Try
investigating the effects of neural induction.”
“What are you talking about?”
said the doctor, coming closer and glancing suspiciously
at the lump beside Bolden. “Do you feel
dizzy? Is there anything else unusual that you
notice?”
“Don’t shout at the patient.”
Bolden waggled his finger reprovingly. He was
proud of the finger. He couldn’t feel what
he was doing, but he had control over it. “You,
Kessler, should face the fact that a doctor can learn
from a patient what the patient learned from the natives.”
But Kessler didn’t hear what
he said. He was looking at the upraised hand.
“You’re moving almost normally,”
he said. “Your own immunity factor is controlling
the disease.”
“Sure. I’ve got an
immunity factor,” said Bolden. “The
same one the natives have. Only it’s not
inside my body.” He rested his hand on the
animal beneath the covers. It never wanted to
leave him. It wouldn’t have to.
“I can set your mind at rest
on one thing, Doctor. Natives are susceptible
to the disease, too. That’s why they were
able to recognize I had it. They gave me the
cure and told me what it was, but I was unable to
see it until it was nearly too late. Here it is.”
He turned back the covers and the exposed animal sleeping
peacefully on his legs which raised its head and licked
his fingers. He felt that.
After an explanation the doctor tempered
his disapproval. It was an unsanitary practice,
but he had to admit that the patient was much improved.
Kessler verified the state of Bolden’s health
by extensive use of the X-ray microscope. Reluctantly
he wheeled the machine to the wall and covered it
up.
“The infection is definitely
receding,” he said. “There are previously
infected areas in which I find it difficult to locate
a single microbe. What I can’t understand
is how it’s done. According to you, the
animal doesn’t break the skin with its tongue
and therefore nothing is released into the bloodstream.
All that seems necessary is that the animal be near
you.” He shook his head behind the microscreen.
“I don’t think much of the electrical
analogy you used.”
“I said the first thing I thought
of. I don’t know if that’s the way
it works, but it seems to me like a pretty fair guess.”
“The microbes do cluster
around nerves,” said the doctor. “We
know that neural activity is partly electrical.
If the level of that activity can be increased, the
bacteria might be killed by ionic dissociation.”
He glanced speculatively at Bolden and the animal.
“Perhaps you do borrow nervous energy from the
animal. We might also find it possible to control
the disease with an electrical current.”
“Don’t try to find out
on me,” said Bolden. “I’ve been
an experimental specimen long enough. Take somebody
who’s healthy. I’ll stick with the
natives’ method.”
“I wasn’t thinking of
experiments in your condition. You’re still
not out of danger.” Nevertheless he showed
his real opinion when he left the room. He failed
to plug in and flash the decontagion suit.
Bolden smiled at the doctor’s
omission and ran his hand through the fur. He
was going to get well.
But his progress was somewhat slower
than he’d anticipated though it seemed to satisfy
the doctor who went on with his experiments. The
offending bacteria could be killed electrically.
But the current was dangerously large and there was
no practical way to apply the treatment to humans.
The animal was the only effective method.
Kessler discovered the microbe required
an intermediate host. A tick or a mosquito seemed
indicated. It would take a protracted search of
the mountains to determine just what insect was the
carrier. In any event the elaborate sanitary
precautions were unnecessary. Microscreens came
down and decontagion suits were no longer worn.
Bolden could not pass the disease on to anyone else.
Neither could the animal. It
seemed wholly without parasites. It was clean
and affectionate, warm to the touch. Bolden was
fortunate that there was such a simple cure for the
most dreaded disease on Van Daamas.
It was several days before he was
ready to leave the small hospital at the edge of the
settlement. At first he sat up in bed and then
he was allowed to walk across the room. As his
activity increased, the animal became more and more
content to lie on the bed and follow him with its
eyes. It no longer frisked about as it had in
the beginning. As Bolden told the nurse, it was
becoming housebroken.
The time came when the doctor failed
to find a single microbe. Bolden’s newly
returned strength and the sensitivity of his skin where
before there had been numbness confirmed the diagnosis.
He was well. Peggy came to walk him home.
It was pleasant to have her near.
“I see you’re ready,”
she said, laughing at his eagerness.
“Except for one thing,”
he said. “Come, Pet.” The animal
raised its head from the bed where it slept.
“Pet?” she said quizzically.
“You ought to give it a name. You’ve
had it long enough to decide on something.”
“Pet’s a name,” he said. “What
can I call it? Doc? Hero?”
She made a face. “I can’t
say I care for either choice, although it did save
your life.”
“Yes, but that’s an attribute
it can’t help. The important thing is that
if you listed what you expect of a pet you’d
find it in this creature. Docile, gentle, lively
at times; all it wants is to be near you, to have
you touch it. And it’s very clean.”
“All right, call it Pet if you
want,” said Peggy. “Come on, Pet.”
It paid no attention to her.
It came when Bolden called, getting slowly off the
bed. It stayed as close as it could get to Bolden.
He was still weak so they didn’t walk fast and,
at first, the animal was able to keep up.
It was almost noon when they went
out. The sun was brilliant and Van Daamas seemed
a wonderful place to be alive in. Yes, with death
behind him, it was a very wonderful place. Bolden
chatted gaily with Peggy. She was fine company.
And then Bolden saw the native who
had given him the animal. Five to seven days,
and he had arrived on time. The rest of the tribe
must be elsewhere in the settlement. Bolden smiled
in recognition while the man was still at some distance.
For an answer the native shifted the bow in his hand
and glanced behind the couple, in the direction of
the hospital.
The movement with the bow might have
been menacing, but Bolden ignored that gesture.
It was the sense that something was missing that caused
him to look down. The animal was not at his side.
He turned around.
The creature was struggling in the
dust. It got to its feet and wobbled toward him,
staggering crazily as it tried to reach him. It
spun around, saw him, and came on again. The
tongue lolled out and it whined once. Then the
native shot it through the heart, pinning it to the
ground. The short tail thumped and then it died.
Bolden couldn’t move. Peggy
clutched his arm. The native walked over to the
animal and looked down. He was silent for a moment.
“Die anyway soon,” he said to Bolden.
“Burned out inside.”
He bent over. The bright yellow
eyes had faded to nothingness in the sunlight.
“Gave you its health,” said the man of
Van Daamas respectfully as he broke off the protruding
arrow.
It was a dark blue arrow.
Now every settlement on the planet
has Bolden’s pets. They have been given
a more scientific name, but nobody remembers what it
is. The animals are kept in pens, exactly as
is done by the natives, on one side of town, not too
near any habitation.
For a while, there was talk that it
was unscientific to use the animal. It was thought
that an electrical treatment could be developed to
replace it. Perhaps this was true. But settling
a planet is a big task. As long as one method
works there isn’t time for research. And
it works the percentage of recovery is
as high as in other common ailments.
But in any case the animal can never
become a pet, though it may be in the small but bright
spark of consciousness that is all the little yellow-eyed
creature wants. The quality that makes it so valuable
is the final disqualification. Strength can be
a weakness. Its nervous system is too powerful
for a man in good health, upsetting the delicate balance
of the human body in a variety of unusual ways.
How the energy-transfer takes place has never been
determined exactly, but it does occur.
It is only when he is stricken with
the Bubble Death and needs additional energy to drive
the invading microbes from the tissue around his nerves
that the patient is allowed to have one of Bolden’s
pets.
In the end, it is the animal that
dies. As the natives knew, it is kindness to
kill it quickly.
It is highly regarded and respectfully
spoken of. Children play as close as they can
get, but are kept well away from the pens by a high,
sturdy fence. Adults walk by and nod kindly to
it.
Bolden never goes there nor will he
speak of it. His friends say he’s unhappy
about being the first Earthman to discover the usefulness
of the little animal. They are right. It
is a distinction he doesn’t care for. He
still has the blue arrow. There are local craftsmen
who can mend it, but he has refused their services.
He wants to keep it as it is.
F. L. Wallace