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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Contagion, by Katherine MacLean
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Contagion
-
-Author: Katherine MacLean
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2015 [EBook #50774]
-
-Language: English
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="375" height="500" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1>CONTAGION</h1>
-
-<p>By KATHERINE MacLEAN</p>
-
-<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br />
-Galaxy Science Fiction October 1950.<br />
-Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br />
-the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus.jpg" width="500" height="367" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph3">Minos was such a lovely planet. Not a<br />
-thing seemed wrong with it. Excepting the food,<br />
-perhaps. And a disease that wasn't really.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>It was like an Earth forest in the fall, but it was not fall. The
-forest leaves were green and copper and purple and fiery red, and a
-wind sent patches of bright greenish sunlight dancing among the leaf
-shadows.</p>
-
-<p>The hunt party of the <i>Explorer</i> filed along the narrow trail, guns
-ready, walking carefully, listening to the distant, half familiar cries
-of strange birds.</p>
-
-<p>A faint crackle of static in their earphones indicated that a gun had
-been fired.</p>
-
-<p>"Got anything?" asked June Walton. The helmet intercom carried her
-voice to the ears of the others without breaking the stillness of the
-forest.</p>
-
-<p>"Took a shot at something," explained George Barton's cheerful voice
-in her earphones. She rounded a bend of the trail and came upon Barton
-standing peering up into the trees, his gun still raised. "It looked
-like a duck."</p>
-
-<p>"This isn't Central Park," said Hal Barton, his brother, coming into
-sight. His green spacesuit struck an incongruous note against the
-bronze and red forest. "They won't all look like ducks," he said
-soberly.</p>
-
-<p>"Maybe some will look like dragons. Don't get eaten by a dragon,
-June," came Max's voice quietly into her earphones. "Not while I still
-love you." He came out of the trees carrying the blood sample kit, and
-touched her glove with his, the grin on his ugly beloved face barely
-visible in the mingled light and shade. A patch of sunlight struck a
-greenish glint from his fishbowl helmet.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They walked on. A quarter of a mile back, the space ship <i>Explorer</i>
-towered over the forest like a tapering skyscraper, and the people of
-the ship looked out of the viewplates at fresh winds and sunlight and
-clouds, and they longed to be outside.</p>
-
-<p>But the likeness to Earth was danger, and the cool wind might be death,
-for if the animals were like Earth animals, their diseases might be
-like Earth diseases, alike enough to be contagious, different enough to
-be impossible to treat. There was warning enough in the past. Colonies
-had vanished, and traveled spaceways drifted with the corpses of ships
-which had touched on some plague planet.</p>
-
-<p>The people of the ship waited while their doctors, in airtight
-spacesuits, hunted animals to test them for contagion.</p>
-
-<p>The four medicos, for June Walton was also a doctor, filed through the
-alien homelike forest, walking softly, watching for motion among the
-copper and purple shadows.</p>
-
-<p>They saw it suddenly, a lighter moving copper patch among the darker
-browns. Reflex action swung June's gun into line, and behind her
-someone's gun went off with a faint crackle of static, and made a hole
-in the leaves beside the specimen. Then for a while no one moved.</p>
-
-<p>This one looked like a man, a magnificently muscled, leanly graceful,
-humanlike animal. Even in its callused bare feet, it was a head taller
-than any of them. Red-haired, hawk-faced and darkly tanned, it stood
-breathing heavily, looking at them without expression. At its side hung
-a sheath knife, and a crossbow was slung across one wide shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>They lowered their guns.</p>
-
-<p>"It needs a shave," Max said reasonably in their earphones, and he
-reached up to his helmet and flipped the switch that let his voice be
-heard. "Something we could do for you, Mac?"</p>
-
-<p>The friendly drawl was the first voice that had broken the forest
-sounds. June smiled suddenly. He was right. The strict logic of
-evolution did not demand beards; therefore a non-human would not be
-wearing a three day growth of red stubble.</p>
-
-<p>Still panting, the tall figure licked dry lips and spoke. "Welcome to
-Minos. The Mayor sends greetings from Alexandria."</p>
-
-<p>"English?" gasped June.</p>
-
-<p>"We were afraid you would take off again before I could bring word to
-you.... It's three hundred miles.... We saw your scout plane pass
-twice, but we couldn't attract its attention."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>June looked in stunned silence at the stranger leaning against the
-tree. Thirty-six light years&mdash;thirty-six times six trillion miles
-of monotonous space travel&mdash;to be told that the planet was already
-settled! "We didn't know there was a colony here," she said. "It is not
-on the map."</p>
-
-<p>"We were afraid of that," the tall bronze man answered soberly. "We
-have been here three generations and yet no traders have come."</p>
-
-<p>Max shifted the kit strap on his shoulder and offered a hand. "My name
-is Max Stark, M.D. This is June Walton, M.D., Hal Barton, M.D., and
-George Barton, Hal's brother, also M.D."</p>
-
-<p>"Patrick Mead is the name," smiled the man, shaking hands casually.
-"Just a hunter and bridge carpenter myself. Never met any medicos
-before."</p>
-
-<p>The grip was effortless but even through her airproofed glove June
-could feel that the fingers that touched hers were as hard as padded
-steel.</p>
-
-<p>"What&mdash;what is the population of Minos?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>He looked down at her curiously for a moment before answering. "Only
-one hundred and fifty." He smiled. "Don't worry, this isn't a city
-planet yet. There's room for a few more people." He shook hands with
-the Bartons quickly. "That is&mdash;you are people, aren't you?" he asked
-startlingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Why not?" said Max with a poise that June admired.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you are all so&mdash;so&mdash;" Patrick Mead's eyes roamed across the
-faces of the group. "So varied."</p>
-
-<p>They could find no meaning in that, and stood puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>"I mean," Patrick Mead said into the silence, "all these&mdash;interesting
-different hair colors and face shapes and so forth&mdash;" He made a vague
-wave with one hand as if he had run out of words or was anxious not to
-insult them.</p>
-
-<p>"Joke?" Max asked, bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>June laid a hand on his arm. "No harm meant," she said to him over the
-intercom. "We're just as much of a shock to him as he is to us."</p>
-
-<p>She addressed a question to the tall colonist on outside sound. "What
-should a person look like, Mr. Mead?"</p>
-
-<p>He indicated her with a smile. "Like you."</p>
-
-<p>June stepped closer and stood looking up at him, considering her own
-description. She was tall and tanned, like him; had a few freckles,
-like him; and wavy red hair, like his. She ignored the brightly
-humorous blue eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"In other words," she said, "everyone on the planet looks like you and
-me?"</p>
-
-<p>Patrick Mead took another look at their four faces and began to grin.
-"Like me, I guess. But I hadn't thought of it before. I did not think
-that people could have different colored hair or that noses could fit
-so many ways onto faces. I was judging by my own appearance, but I
-suppose any fool can walk on his hands and say the world is upside
-down!" He laughed and sobered. "But then why wear spacesuits? The air
-is breathable."</p>
-
-<p>"For safety," June told him. "We can't take any chances on plague."</p>
-
-<p>Pat Mead was wearing nothing but a loin cloth and his weapons, and the
-wind ruffled his hair. He looked comfortable, and they longed to take
-off the stuffy spacesuits and feel the wind against their own skins.
-Minos was like home, like Earth.... But they were strangers.</p>
-
-<p>"Plague," Pat Mead said thoughtfully. "We had one here. It came two
-years after the colony arrived and killed everyone except the Mead
-families. They were immune. I guess we look alike because we're all
-related, and that's why I grew up thinking that it is the only way
-people can look."</p>
-
-<p><i>Plague.</i> "What was the disease?" Hal Barton asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Pretty gruesome, according to my father. They called it the melting
-sickness. The doctors died too soon to find out what it was or what to
-do about it."</p>
-
-<p>"You should have trained for more doctors, or sent to civilization for
-some." A trace of impatience was in George Barton's voice.</p>
-
-<p>Pat Mead explained patiently, "Our ship, with the power plant and all
-the books we needed, went off into the sky to avoid the contagion,
-and never came back. The crew must have died." Long years of hardship
-were indicated by that statement, a colony with electric power gone
-and machinery stilled, with key technicians dead and no way to replace
-them. June realized then the full meaning of the primitive sheath knife
-and bow.</p>
-
-<p>"Any recurrence of melting sickness?" asked Hal Barton.</p>
-
-<p>"No."</p>
-
-<p>"Any other diseases?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not a one."</p>
-
-<p>Max was eyeing the bronze red-headed figure with something approaching
-awe. "Do you think all the Meads look like that?" he said to June on
-the intercom. "I wouldn't mind being a Mead myself!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Their job had been made easy by the coming of Pat. They went back to
-the ship laughing, exchanging anecdotes with him. There was nothing
-now to keep Minos from being the home they wanted, except the melting
-sickness, and, forewarned against it, they could take precautions.</p>
-
-<p>The polished silver and black column of the <i>Explorer</i> seemed to rise
-higher and higher over the trees as they neared it. Then its symmetry
-blurred all sense of specific size as they stepped out from among the
-trees and stood on the edge of the meadow, looking up.</p>
-
-<p>"Nice!" said Pat. "Beautiful!" The admiration in his voice was warming.</p>
-
-<p>"It was a yacht," Max said, still looking up, "second hand, an old-time
-beauty without a sign of wear. Synthetic diamond-studded control board
-and murals on the walls. It doesn't have the new speed drives, but it
-brought us thirty-six light years in one and a half subjective years.
-Plenty good enough."</p>
-
-<p>The tall tanned man looked faintly wistful, and June realized that
-he had never had access to a full library, never seen a movie, never
-experienced luxury. He had been born and raised on Minos.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"May I go aboard?" Pat asked hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>Max unslung the specimen kit from his shoulder, laid it on the carpet
-of plants that covered the ground and began to open it.</p>
-
-<p>"Tests first," Hal Barton said. "We have to find out if you people
-still carry this so-called melting sickness. We'll have to de-microbe
-you and take specimens before we let you on board. Once on, you'll be
-no good as a check for what the other Meads might have."</p>
-
-<p>Max was taking out a rack and a stand of preservative bottles and
-hypodermics.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you going to jab me with those?" Pat asked with interest.</p>
-
-<p>"You're just a specimen animal to me, bud!" Max grinned at Pat Mead,
-and Pat grinned back. June saw that they were friends already, the
-tall pantherish colonist, and the wry, black-haired doctor. She felt a
-stab of guilt because she loved Max and yet could pity him for being
-smaller and frailer than Pat Mead.</p>
-
-<p>"Lie down," Max told him, "and hold still. We need two spinal fluid
-samples from the back, a body cavity one in front, and another from the
-arm."</p>
-
-<p>Pat lay down obediently. Max knelt, and, as he spoke, expertly swabbed
-and inserted needles with the smooth speed that had made him a fine
-nerve surgeon on Earth.</p>
-
-<p>High above them the scout helioplane came out of an opening in the ship
-and angled off toward the west, its buzz diminishing. Then, suddenly,
-it veered and headed back, and Reno Unrich's voice came tinnily from
-their earphones:</p>
-
-<p>"What's that you've got? Hey, what are you docs doing down there?" He
-banked again and came to a stop, hovering fifty feet away. June could
-see his startled face looking through the glass at Pat.</p>
-
-<p>Hal Barton switched to a narrow radio beam, explained rapidly and
-pointed in the direction of Alexandria. Reno's plane lifted and flew
-away over the odd-colored forest.</p>
-
-<p>"The plane will drop a note on your town, telling them you got
-through to us," Hal Barton told Pat, who was sitting up watching Max
-dexterously put the blood and spinal fluids into the right bottles
-without exposing them to air.</p>
-
-<p>"We won't be free to contact your people until we know if they still
-carry melting sickness," Max added. "You might be immune so it doesn't
-show on you, but still carry enough germs&mdash;if that's what caused it&mdash;to
-wipe out a planet."</p>
-
-<p>"If you do carry melting sickness," said Hal Barton, "we won't be able
-to mingle with your people until we've cleared them of the disease."</p>
-
-<p>"Starting with me?" Pat asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Starting with you," Max told him ruefully, "as soon as you step on
-board."</p>
-
-<p>"More needles?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and a few little extras thrown in."</p>
-
-<p>"Rough?"</p>
-
-<p>"It isn't easy."</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later, standing in the stalls for spacesuit
-decontamination, being buffeted by jets of hot disinfectant, bathed in
-glares of sterilizing ultraviolet radiation, June remembered that and
-compared Pat Mead's treatment to theirs.</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Explorer</i>, stored carefully in sealed tanks and containers,
-was the ultimate, multi-purpose cureall. It was a solution of enzymes
-so like the key catalysts of the human cell nucleus that it caused
-chemical derangement and disintegration in any non-human cell. Nothing
-could live in contact with it but human cells; any alien intruder to
-the body would die. Nucleocat Cureall was its trade name.</p>
-
-<p>But the cureall alone was not enough for complete safety. Plagues had
-been known to slay too rapidly and universally to be checked by human
-treatment. Doctors are not reliable; they die. Therefore spaceways and
-interplanetary health law demanded that ship equipment for guarding
-against disease be totally mechanical in operation, rapid and efficient.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere near them, in a series of stalls which led around and
-around like a rabbit maze, Pat was being herded from stall to stall
-by peremptory mechanical voices, directed to soap and shower, ordered
-to insert his arm into a slot which took a sample of his blood, given
-solutions to drink, bathed in germicidal ultraviolet, shaken by sonic
-blasts, breathing air thick with sprays of germicidal mists, being
-directed to put his arms into other slots where they were anesthesized
-and injected with various immunizing solutions.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, he would be put in a room of high temperature and extreme
-dryness, and instructed to sit for half an hour while more fluids were
-dripped into his veins through long thin tubes.</p>
-
-<p>All legal spaceships were built for safety. No chance was taken of
-allowing a suspected carrier to bring an infection on board with him.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>June stepped from the last shower stall into the locker room, zipped
-off her spacesuit with a sigh of relief, and contemplated herself in a
-wall mirror. Red hair, dark blue eyes, tall....</p>
-
-<p>"I've got a good figure," she said thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>Max turned at the door. "Why this sudden interest in your looks?" he
-asked suspiciously. "Do we stand here and admire you, or do we finally
-get something to eat?"</p>
-
-<p>"Wait a minute." She went to a wall phone and dialed it carefully,
-using a combination from the ship's directory. "How're you doing, Pat?"</p>
-
-<p>The phone picked up a hissing of water or spray. There was a startled
-chuckle. "Voices, too! Hello, June. How do you tell a machine to go
-jump in the lake?"</p>
-
-<p>"Are you hungry?"</p>
-
-<p>"No food since yesterday."</p>
-
-<p>"We'll have a banquet ready for you when you get out," she told Pat and
-hung up, smiling. Pat Mead's voice had a vitality and enjoyment which
-made shipboard talk sound like sad artificial gaiety in contrast.</p>
-
-<p>They looked into the nearby small laboratory where twelve squealing
-hamsters were protestingly submitting to a small injection each of
-Pat's blood. In most of them the injection was followed by one of
-antihistaminics and adaptives. Otherwise the hamster defense system
-would treat all non-hamster cells as enemies, even the harmless human
-blood cells, and fight back against them violently.</p>
-
-<p>One hamster, the twelfth, was given an extra large dose of adaptive,
-so that if there were a disease, he would not fight it or the human
-cells, and thus succumb more rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>"How ya doing, George?" Max asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Routine," George Barton grunted absently.</p>
-
-<p>On the way up the long spiral ramps to the dining hall, they passed a
-viewplate. It showed a long scene of mountains in the distance on the
-horizon, and between them, rising step by step as they grew farther
-away, the low rolling hills, bronze and red with patches of clear green
-where there were fields.</p>
-
-<p>Someone was looking out, standing very still, as if she had been
-there a long time&mdash;Bess St. Clair, a Canadian woman. "It looks like
-Winnipeg," she told them as they paused. "When are you doctors going to
-let us out of this blithering barberpole? Look," she pointed. "See that
-patch of field on the south hillside, with the brook winding through
-it? I've staked that hillside for our house. When do we get out?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Reno Ulrich's tiny scout plane buzzed slowly in from the distance and
-began circling lazily.</p>
-
-<p>"Sooner than you think," Max told her. "We've discovered a castaway
-colony on the planet. They've done our tests for us by just living
-here. If there's anything here to catch, they've caught it."</p>
-
-<p>"People on Minos?" Bess's handsome ruddy face grew alive with
-excitement.</p>
-
-<p>"One of them is down in the medical department," June said. "He'll be
-out in twenty minutes."</p>
-
-<p>"May I go see him?"</p>
-
-<p>"Sure," said Max. "Show him the way to the dining hall when he gets
-out. Tell him we sent you."</p>
-
-<p>"Right!" She turned and ran down the ramp like a small girl going to a
-fire. Max grinned at June and she grinned back. After a year and a half
-of isolation in space, everyone was hungry for the sight of new faces,
-the sound of unfamiliar voices.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>They climbed the last two turns to the cafeteria, and entered to a rich
-subdued blend of soft music and quiet conversations. The cafeteria
-was a section of the old dining room, left when the rest of the ship
-had been converted to living and working quarters, and it still had
-the original finely grained wood of the ceiling and walls, the sound
-absorbency, the soft music spools and the intimate small light at each
-table where people leisurely ate and talked.</p>
-
-<p>They stood in line at the hot foods counter, and behind her June
-could hear a girl's voice talking excitedly through the murmur of
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>"&mdash;new man, honest! I saw him through the viewplate when they came in.
-He's down in the medical department. A real frontiersman."</p>
-
-<p>The line drew abreast of the counters, and she and Max chose three
-heaping trays, starting with hydroponic mushroom steak, raised in
-the growing trays of water and chemicals; sharp salad bowl with rose
-tomatoes and aromatic peppers; tank-grown fish with special sauce; four
-different desserts, and assorted beverages.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they had three tottering trays successfully maneuvered to a
-table. Brant St. Clair came over. "I beg your pardon, Max, but they are
-saying something about Reno carrying messages to a colony of savages,
-for the medical department. Will he be back soon, do you know?"</p>
-
-<p>Max smiled up at him, his square face affectionate. Everyone liked the
-shy Canadian. "He's back already. We just saw him come in."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, fine." St. Clair beamed. "I had an appointment with him to go out
-and confirm what looks like a nice vein of iron to the northeast. Have
-you seen Bess? Oh&mdash;there she is." He turned swiftly and hurried away.</p>
-
-<p>A very tall man with fiery red hair came in surrounded by an eagerly
-talking crowd of ship people. It was Pat Mead. He stood in the doorway,
-alertly scanning the dining room. Sheer vitality made him seem even
-larger than he was. Sighting June, he smiled and began to thread toward
-their table.</p>
-
-<p>"Look!" said someone. "There's the colonist!" Shelia, a pretty, jeweled
-woman, followed and caught his arm. "Did you <i>really</i> swim across a
-river to come here?"</p>
-
-<p>Overflowing with good-will and curiosity, people approached from all
-directions. "Did you actually walk three hundred miles? Come, eat with
-us. Let me help choose your tray."</p>
-
-<p>Everyone wanted him to eat at their table, everyone was a specialist
-and wanted data about Minos. They all wanted anecdotes about hunting
-wild animals with a bow and arrow.</p>
-
-<p>"He needs to be rescued," Max said. "He won't have a chance to eat."</p>
-
-<p>June and Max got up firmly, edged through the crowd, captured Pat and
-escorted him back to their table. June found herself pleased to be
-claiming the hero of the hour.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Pat sat in the simple, subtly designed chair and leaned back almost
-voluptuously, testing the way it gave and fitted itself to him. He
-ran his eyes over the bright tableware and heaped plates. He looked
-around at the rich grained walls and soft lights at each table. He said
-nothing, just looking and feeling and experiencing.</p>
-
-<p>"When we build our town and leave the ship," June explained, "we
-will turn all the staterooms back into the lounges and ballrooms and
-cocktail bars that used to be inside."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I'm not complaining," Pat said negligently. He cocked his head to
-the music, and tried to locate its source.</p>
-
-<p>"That's big of you," said Max with gentle irony.</p>
-
-<p>They fell to, Pat beginning the first meal he had had in more than a
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the other diners finished when they were halfway through,
-and began walking over, diffidently at first, then in another wave
-of smiling faces, handshakes, and introductions. Pat was asked about
-crops, about farming methods, about rainfall and floods, about farm
-animals and plant breeding, about the compatibility of imported Earth
-seeds with local ground, about mines and strata.</p>
-
-<p>There was no need to protect him. He leaned back in his chair and
-drawled answers with the lazy ease of a panther; where he could think
-of no statistic, he would fill the gap with an anecdote. It developed
-that he enjoyed spinning campfire yarns and especially being the center
-of interest.</p>
-
-<p>Between bouts of questions, he ate with undiminished and glowing relish.</p>
-
-<p>June noticed that the female specialists were prolonging the questions
-more than they needed, clustering around the table laughing at his
-jokes, until presently Pat was almost surrounded by pretty faces,
-eager questions, and chiming laughs. Shelia the beautiful laughed most
-chimingly of all.</p>
-
-<p>June nudged Max, and Max shrugged indifferently. It wasn't anything a
-man would pay attention to, perhaps. But June watched Pat for a moment
-more, then glanced uneasily back to Max. He was eating and listening
-to Pat's answers and did not feel her gaze. For some reason Max looked
-almost shrunken to her. He was shorter than she had realized; she had
-forgotten that he was only the same height as herself. She was dimly
-aware of the clear lilting chatter of female voices increasing at Pat's
-end of the table.</p>
-
-<p>"That guy's a menace," Max said, and laughed to himself, cutting
-another slice of hydroponic mushroom steak. "What's eating you?" he
-added, glancing aside at her when he noticed her sudden stillness.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing," she said hastily, but she did not turn back to watching Pat
-Mead. She felt disloyal. Pat was only a superb animal. Max was the man
-she loved. Or&mdash;was he? Of course he was, she told herself angrily.
-They had gone colonizing together because they wanted to spend their
-lives together; she had never thought of marrying any other man. Yet
-the sense of dissatisfaction persisted, and along with it a feeling of
-guilt.</p>
-
-<p>Len Marlow, the protein tank-culture technician responsible for the
-mushroom steaks, had wormed his way into the group and asked Pat a
-question. Now he was saying, "I don't dig you, Pat. It sounds like
-you're putting the people into the tanks instead of the vegetables!" He
-glanced at them, looking puzzled. "See if you two can make anything of
-this. It sounds medical to me."</p>
-
-<p>Pat leaned back and smiled, sipping a glass of hydroponic burgundy.
-"Wonderful stuff. You'll have to show us how to make it."</p>
-
-<p>Len turned back to him. "You people live off the country, right? You
-hunt and bring in steaks and eat them, right? Well, say I have one of
-those steaks right here and I want to eat it, what happens?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Go ahead and eat it. It just wouldn't digest. You'd stay hungry."</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" Len was aggrieved.</p>
-
-<p>"Chemical differences in the basic protoplasm of Minos. Different
-amino linkages, left-handed instead of right-handed molecules in the
-carbohydrates, things like that. Nothing will be digestible here until
-you are adapted chemically by a little test-tube evolution. Till then
-you'd starve to death on a full stomach."</p>
-
-<p>Pat's side of the table had been loaded with the dishes from two trays,
-but it was almost clear now and the dishes were stacked neatly to one
-side. He started on three desserts, thoughtfully tasting each in turn.</p>
-
-<p>"Test-tube evolution?" Max repeated. "What's that? I thought you people
-had no doctors."</p>
-
-<p>"It's a story." Pat leaned back again. "Alexander P. Mead, the head of
-the Mead clan, was a plant geneticist, a very determined personality
-and no man to argue with. He didn't want us to go through the struggle
-of killing off all Minos plants and putting in our own, spoiling the
-face of the planet and upsetting the balance of its ecology. He decided
-that he would adapt our genes to this planet or kill us trying. He did
-it all right.'"</p>
-
-<p>"Did which?" asked June, suddenly feeling a sourceless prickle of fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Adapted us to Minos. He took human cells&mdash;"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She listened intently, trying to find a reason for fear in the
-explanation. It would have taken many human generations to adapt to
-Minos by ordinary evolution, and that only at a heavy toll of death and
-hunger which evolution exacts. There was a shorter way: Human cells
-have the ability to return to their primeval condition of independence,
-hunting, eating and reproducing alone.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander P. Mead took human cells and made them into phagocytes.
-He put them through the hard savage school of evolution&mdash;a thousand
-generations of multiplication, hardship and hunger, with the alien
-indigestible food always present, offering its reward of plenty to the
-cell that reluctantly learned to absorb it.</p>
-
-<p>"Leucocytes can run through several thousand generations of evolution
-in six months," Pat Mead finished. "When they reached to a point where
-they would absorb Minos food, he planted them back in the people he
-had taken them from."</p>
-
-<p>"What was supposed to happen then?" Max asked, leaning forward.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know exactly how it worked. He never told anybody much about
-it, and when I was a little boy he had gone loco and was wandering
-ha-ha-ing around waving a test tube. Fell down a ravine and broke his
-neck at the age of eighty."</p>
-
-<p>"A character," Max said.</p>
-
-<p>Why was she afraid? "It worked then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. He tried it on all the Meads the first year. The other settlers
-didn't want to be experimented on until they saw how it worked out. It
-worked. The Meads could hunt, and plant while the other settlers were
-still eating out of hydroponics tanks."</p>
-
-<p>"It worked," said Max to Len. "You're a plant geneticist and a tank
-culture expert. There's a job for you."</p>
-
-<p>"Uh-<i>uh</i>!" Len backed away. "It sounds like a medical problem to me.
-Human cell control&mdash;right up your alley."</p>
-
-<p>"It is a one-way street," Pat warned. "Once it is done, you won't be
-able to digest ship food. I'll get no good from this protein. I ate it
-just for the taste."</p>
-
-<p>Hal Barton appeared quietly beside the table. "Three of the twelve test
-hamsters have died," he reported, and turned to Pat. "Your people carry
-the germs of melting sickness, as you call it. The dead hamsters were
-injected with blood taken from you before you were de-infected. We
-can't settle here unless we de-infect everybody on Minos. Would they
-object?"</p>
-
-<p>"We wouldn't want to give you folks germs," Pat smiled. "Anything for
-safety. But there'll have to be a vote on it first."</p>
-
-<p>The doctors went to Reno Ulrich's table and walked with him to the
-hangar, explaining. He was to carry the proposal to Alexandria, mingle
-with the people, be persuasive and wait for them to vote before
-returning. He was to give himself shots of cureall every two hours on
-the hour or run the risk of disease.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Reno was pleased. He had dabbled in sociology before retraining as a
-mechanic for the expedition. "This gives me a chance to study their
-mores." He winked wickedly. "I may not be back for several nights."
-They watched through the viewplate as he took off, and then went over
-to the laboratory for a look at the hamsters.</p>
-
-<p>Three were alive and healthy, munching lettuce. One was the control;
-the other two had been given shots of Pat's blood from before he
-entered the ship, but with no additional treatment. Apparently a
-hamster could fight off melting sickness easily if left alone. Three
-were still feverish and ruffled, with a low red blood count, but
-recovering. The three dead ones had been given strong shots of adaptive
-and counter histamine, so their bodies had not fought back against the
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>June glanced at the dead animals hastily and looked away again.
-They lay twisted with a strange semi-fluid limpness, as if ready to
-dissolve. The last hamster, which had been given the heaviest dose
-of adaptive, had apparently lost all its hair before death. It was
-hairless and pink, like a still-born baby.</p>
-
-<p>"We can find no micro-organisms," George Barton said. "None at all.
-Nothing in the body that should not be there. Leucosis and anemia.
-Fever only for the ones that fought it off." He handed Max some
-temperature charts and graphs of blood counts.</p>
-
-<p>June wandered out into the hall. Pediatrics and obstetrics were her
-field; she left the cellular research to Max, and just helped him with
-laboratory routine. The strange mood followed her out into the hall,
-then abruptly lightened.</p>
-
-<p>Coming toward her, busily telling a tale of adventure to the gorgeous
-Shelia Davenport, was a tall, red-headed, magnificently handsome man.
-It was his handsomeness which made Pat such a pleasure to look upon
-and talk with, she guiltily told herself, and it was his tremendous
-vitality.... It was like meeting a movie hero in the flesh, or a hero
-out of the pages of a book&mdash;Deer-slayer, John Clayton, Lord Greystoke.</p>
-
-<p>She waited in the doorway to the laboratory and made no move to join
-them, merely acknowledged the two with a nod and a smile and a casual
-lift of the hand. They nodded and smiled back.</p>
-
-<p>"Hello, June," said Pat and continued telling his tale, but as they
-passed he lightly touched her arm.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, pioneer!" she said mockingly and softly to his passing profile,
-and knew that he had heard.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That night she had a nightmare. She was running down a long corridor
-looking for Max, but every man she came to was a big bronze man with
-red hair and bright blue eyes who grinned at her.</p>
-
-<p>The pink hamster! She woke suddenly, feeling as if alarm bells had been
-ringing, and listened carefully, but there was no sound. She had had a
-nightmare, she told herself, but alarm bells were still ringing in her
-unconscious. Something was wrong.</p>
-
-<p>Lying still and trying to preserve the images, she groped for a
-meaning, but the mood faded under the cold touch of reason. Damn
-intuitive thinking! A pink hamster! Why did the unconscious have to be
-so vague? She fell asleep again and forgot.</p>
-
-<p>They had lunch with Pat Mead that day, and after it was over Pat
-delayed June with a hand on her shoulder and looked down at her for a
-moment. "I want you, June," he said and then turned away, answering the
-hails of a party at another table as if he had not spoken. She stood
-shaken, and then walked to the door where Max waited.</p>
-
-<p>She was particularly affectionate with Max the rest of the day, and it
-pleased him. He would not have been if he had known why. She tried to
-forget Pat's blunt statement.</p>
-
-<p>June was in the laboratory with Max, watching the growth of a small
-tank culture of the alien protoplasm from a Minos weed, and listening
-to Len Marlow pour out his troubles.</p>
-
-<p>"And Elsie tags around after that big goof all day, listening to his
-stories. And then she tells me I'm just jealous, I'm imagining things!"
-He passed his hand across his eyes. "I came away from Earth to be with
-Elsie.... I'm getting a headache. Look, can't you persuade Pat to cut
-it out, June? You and Max are his friends."</p>
-
-<p>"Here, have an aspirin," June said. "We'll see what we can do."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks." Len picked up his tank culture and went out, not at all
-cheered.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Max sat brooding over the dials and meters at his end of the
-laboratory, apparently sunk in thought. When Len had gone, he spoke
-almost harshly.</p>
-
-<p>"Why encourage the guy? Why let him hope?"</p>
-
-<p>"Found out anything about the differences in protoplasm?" she evaded.</p>
-
-<p>"Why let him kid himself? What chance has he got against that hunk of
-muscle and smooth talk?"</p>
-
-<p>"But Pat isn't after Elsie," she protested.</p>
-
-<p>"Every scatter-brained woman on this ship is trailing after Pat with
-her tongue hanging out. Brant St. Clair is in the bar right now.
-He doesn't say what he is drinking about, but do you think Pat is
-resisting all these women crowding down on him?"</p>
-
-<p>"There are other things besides looks and charm," she said, grimly
-trying to concentrate on a slide under her binocular microscope.</p>
-
-<p>"Yeah, and whatever they are, Pat has them, too. Who's more competent
-to support a woman and a family on a frontier planet than a handsome
-bruiser who was born here?"</p>
-
-<p>"I meant," June spun around on her stool with unexpected passion,
-"there is old friendship, and there's fondness, and memories, and
-loyalty!" She was half shouting.</p>
-
-<p>"They're not worth much on the second-hand market," Max said. He was
-sitting slumped on his lab stool, looking dully at his dials. "Now
-<i>I'm</i> getting a headache!" He smiled ruefully. "No kidding, a real
-headache. And over other people's troubles yet!"</p>
-
-<p>Other people's troubles.... She got up and wandered out into the long
-curving halls. "I want you June," Pat's voice repeated in her mind.
-Why did the man have to be so overpoweringly attractive, so glaring a
-contrast to Max? Why couldn't the universe manage to run on without
-generating troublesome love triangles?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She walked up the curving ramps to the dining hall where they had eaten
-and drunk and talked yesterday. It was empty except for one couple
-talking forehead to forehead over cold coffee.</p>
-
-<p>She turned and wandered down the long easy spiral of corridor to
-the pharmacy and dispensary. It was empty. George was probably in
-the test lab next door, where he could hear if he was wanted. The
-automatic vendor of harmless euphorics, stimulants and opiates stood
-in the corner, brightly decorated in pastel abstract designs, with its
-automatic tabulator graph glowing above it.</p>
-
-<p>Max had a headache, she remembered. She recorded her thumbprint in the
-machine and pushed the plunger for a box of aspirins, trying to focus
-her attention on the problem of adapting the people of the ship to
-the planet Minos. An aquarium tank with a faint solution of histamine
-would be enough to convert a piece of human skin into a community of
-voracious active phagocytes individually seeking something to devour,
-but could they eat enough to live away from the rich sustaining plasma
-of human blood?</p>
-
-<p>After the aspirins, she pushed another plunger for something for
-herself. Then she stood looking at it, a small box with three pills in
-her hand&mdash;Theobromine, a heart strengthener and a confidence-giving
-euphoric all in one, something to steady shaky nerves. She had used it
-before only in emergency. She extended a hand and looked at it. It was
-trembling. Damn triangles!</p>
-
-<p>While she was looking at her hand there was a click from the automatic
-drug vendor. It summed the morning use of each drug in the vendors
-throughout the ship, and recorded it in a neat addition to the end of
-each graph line. For a moment she could not find the green line for
-anodynes and the red line for stimulants, and then she saw that they
-went almost straight up.</p>
-
-<p>There were too many being used&mdash;far too many to be explained by
-jealousy or psychosomatic peevishness. This was an epidemic, and only
-one disease was possible!</p>
-
-<p>The disinfecting of Pat had not succeeded. Nucleocat Cureall, killer of
-all infections, had not cured! Pat had brought melting sickness into
-the ship with him!</p>
-
-<p>Who had it?</p>
-
-<p>The drugs vendor glowed cheerfully, uncommunicative. She opened a
-panel in its side and looked in on restless interlacing cogs, and on
-the inside of the door saw printed some directions.... "To remove or
-examine records before reaching end of the reel&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>After a few fumbling minutes she had the answer. In the cafeteria at
-breakfast and lunch, thirty-eight men out of the forty-eight aboard
-ship had taken more than his norm of stimulant. Twenty-one had taken
-aspirin as well. The only woman who had made an unusual purchase was
-herself!</p>
-
-<p>She remembered the hamsters that had thrown off the infection with a
-short sharp fever, and checked back in the records to the day before.
-There was a short rise in aspirin sales to women at late afternoon. The
-women were safe.</p>
-
-<p>It was the men who had melting sickness!</p>
-
-<p>Melting sickness killed in hours, according to Pat Mead. How long had
-the men been sick?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As she was leaving, Jerry came into the pharmacy, recorded his
-thumbprint and took a box of aspirin from the machine.</p>
-
-<p>She felt all right. Self-control was working well and it was pleasant
-still to walk down the corridor smiling at the people who passed.
-She took the emergency elevator to the control room and showed her
-credentials to the technician on watch.</p>
-
-<p>"Medical Emergency." At a small control panel in the corner was a large
-red button, precisely labeled. She considered it and picked up the
-control room phone. This was the hard part, telling someone, especially
-someone who had it&mdash;Max.</p>
-
-<p>She dialed, and when the click on the end of the line showed he had
-picked the phone up, she told Max what she had seen.</p>
-
-<p>"No women, just the men," he repeated. "That right?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Probably it's chemically alien, inhibited by one of the female sex
-hormones. We'll try sex hormone shots, if we have to. Where are you
-calling from?"</p>
-
-<p>She told him.</p>
-
-<p>"That's right. Give Nucleocat Cureall another chance. It might work
-this time. Push that button."</p>
-
-<p>She went to the panel and pushed the large red button. Through the
-long height of the <i>Explorer</i>, bells woke to life and began to ring
-in frightened clangor, emergency doors thumped shut, mechanical
-apparatus hummed into life and canned voices began to give rapid urgent
-directions.</p>
-
-<p>A plague had come.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She obeyed the mechanical orders, went out into the hall and walked in
-line with the others. The captain walked ahead of her and the gorgeous
-Shelia Davenport fell into step beside her. "I look like a positive hag
-this morning. Does that mean I'm sick? Are we all sick?"</p>
-
-<p>June shrugged, unwilling to say what she knew.</p>
-
-<p>Others came out of all rooms into the corridor, thickening the line.
-They could hear each room lock as the last person left it, and then,
-faintly, the hiss of disinfectant spray. Behind them, on the heels of
-the last person in line, segments of the ship slammed off and began to
-hiss.</p>
-
-<p>They wound down the spiral corridor until they reached the medical
-treatment section again, and there they waited in line.</p>
-
-<p>"It won't scar my arms, will it?" asked Shelia apprehensively,
-glancing at her smooth, lovely arms.</p>
-
-<p>The mechanical voice said, "Next. Step inside, please, and stand clear
-of the door."</p>
-
-<p>"Not a bit," June reassured Shelia, and stepped into the cubicle.</p>
-
-<p>Inside, she was directed from cubicle to cubicle and given the usual
-buffeting by sprays and radiation, had blood samples taken and was
-injected with Nucleocat and a series of other protectives. At last she
-was directed through another door into a tiny cubicle with a chair.</p>
-
-<p>"You are to wait here," commanded the recorded voice metallically. "In
-twenty minutes the door will unlock and you may then leave. All people
-now treated may visit all parts of the ship which have been protected.
-It is forbidden to visit any quarantined or unsterile part of the ship
-without permission from the medical officers."</p>
-
-<p>Presently the door unlocked and she emerged into bright lights again,
-feeling slightly battered.</p>
-
-<p>She was in the clinic. A few men sat on the edge of beds and looked
-sick. One was lying down. Brant and Bess St. Clair sat near each other,
-not speaking.</p>
-
-<p>Approaching her was George Barton, reading a thermometer with a puzzled
-expression.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it, George?" she asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>"Some of the women have slight fever, but it's going down. None of the
-fellows have any&mdash;but their white count is way up, their red count is
-way down, and they look sick to me."</p>
-
-<p>She approached St. Clair. His usually ruddy cheeks were pale, his pulse
-was light and too fast, and his skin felt clammy. "How's the headache?
-Did the Nucleocat treatment help?"</p>
-
-<p>"I feel worse, if anything."</p>
-
-<p>"Better set up beds," she told George. "Get everyone back into the
-clinic."</p>
-
-<p>"We're doing that," George assured her. "That's what Hal is doing."</p>
-
-<p>She went back to the laboratory. Max was pacing up and down, absently
-running his hands through his black hair until it stood straight up. He
-stopped when he saw her face, and scowled thoughtfully. "They are still
-sick?" It was more a statement than a question.</p>
-
-<p>She nodded.</p>
-
-<p>"The Cureall didn't cure this time," he muttered. "That leaves it up
-to us. We have melting sickness and according to Pat and the hamsters,
-that leaves us less than a day to find out what it is and learn how to
-stop it."</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly an idea for another test struck him and he moved to the work
-table to set it up. He worked rapidly, with an occasional uncoordinated
-movement betraying his usual efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>It was strange to see Max troubled and afraid.</p>
-
-<p>She put on a laboratory smock and began to work. She worked in
-silence. The mechanicals had failed. Hal and George Barton were busy
-staving off death from the weaker cases and trying to gain time for Max
-and her to work. The problem of the plague had to be solved by the two
-of them alone. It was in their hands.</p>
-
-<p>Another test, no results. Another test, no results. Max's hands were
-shaking and he stopped a moment to take stimulants.</p>
-
-<p>She went into the ward for a moment, found Bess and warned her quietly
-to tell the other women to be ready to take over if the men became too
-sick to go on. "But tell them calmly. We don't want to frighten the
-men." She lingered in the ward long enough to see the word spread among
-the women in a widening wave of paler faces and compressed lips; then
-she went back to the laboratory.</p>
-
-<p>Another test. There was no sign of a micro-organism in anyone's blood,
-merely a growing horde of leucocytes and phagocytes, prowling as if
-mobilized to repel invasion.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Len Marlow was wheeled in unconscious, with Hal Barton's written
-comments and conclusions pinned to the blanket.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't feel so well myself," the assistant complained. "The air feels
-thick. I can't breathe."</p>
-
-<p>June saw that his lips were blue. "Oxygen short," she told Max.</p>
-
-<p>"Low red corpuscle count," Max answered. "Look into a drop and see
-what's going on. Use mine; I feel the same way he does." She took two
-drops of Max's blood. The count was low, falling too fast.</p>
-
-<p>Breathing is useless without the proper minimum of red corpuscles in
-the blood. People below that minimum die of asphyxiation although their
-lungs are full of pure air. The red corpuscle count was falling too
-fast. The time she and Max had to work in was too short.</p>
-
-<p>"Pump some more CO<sub>2</sub> into the air system," Max said urgently over the
-phone. "Get some into the men's end of the ward."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She looked through the microscope at the live sample of blood. It was a
-dark clear field and bright moving things spun and swirled through it,
-but she could see nothing that did not belong there.</p>
-
-<p>"Hal," Max called over the general speaker system, "cut the other
-treatments, check for accelerating anemia. Treat it like monoxide
-poisoning&mdash;CO<sub>2</sub> and oxygen."</p>
-
-<p>She reached into a cupboard under the work table, located two cylinders
-of oxygen, cracked the valves and handed one to Max and one to the
-assistant. Some of the bluish tint left the assistant's face as he
-breathed and he went over to the patient with reawakened concern.</p>
-
-<p>"Not breathing, Doc!"</p>
-
-<p>Max was working at the desk, muttering equations of hemoglobin
-catalysis.</p>
-
-<p>"Len's gone, Doc," the assistant said more loudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Artificial respiration and get him into a regeneration tank," said
-June, not moving from the microscope. "Hurry! Hal will show you how.
-The oxidation and mechanical heart action in the tank will keep him
-going. Put anyone in a tank who seems to be dying. Get some women to
-help you. Give them Hal's instructions."</p>
-
-<p>The tanks were ordinarily used to suspend animation in a nutrient bath
-during the regrowth of any diseased organ. It could preserve life in
-an almost totally destroyed body during the usual disintegration and
-regrowth treatments for cancer and old age, and it could encourage
-healing as destruction continued ... but they could not prevent
-ultimate death as long as the disease was not conquered.</p>
-
-<p>The drop of blood in June's microscope was a great, dark field, and in
-the foreground, brought to gargantuan solidity by the stereo effect,
-drifted neat saucer shapes of red blood cells. They turned end for end,
-floating by the humped misty mass of a leucocyte which was crawling on
-the cover glass. There were not enough red corpuscles, and she felt
-that they grew fewer as she watched.</p>
-
-<p>She fixed her eye on one, not blinking in fear that she would miss what
-might happen. It was a tidy red button, and it spun as it drifted, the
-current moving it aside in a curve as it passed by the leucocyte.</p>
-
-<p>Then, abruptly, the cell vanished.</p>
-
-<p>June stared numbly at the place where it had been.</p>
-
-<p>Behind her, Max was calling over the speaker system again: "Dr. Stark
-speaking. Any technician who knows anything about the life tanks, start
-bringing more out of storage and set them up. Emergency."</p>
-
-<p>"We may need forty-seven," June said quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"We may need forty-seven," Max repeated to the ship in general. His
-voice did not falter. "Set them up along the corridor. Hook them in on
-extension lines."</p>
-
-<p>His voice filtered back from the empty floors above in a series of dim
-echoes. What he had said meant that every man on board might be on the
-point of heart stoppage.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>June looked blindly through the binocular microscope, trying to think.
-Out of the corner of her eyes she could see that Max was wavering and
-breathing more and more frequently of the pure, cold, burning oxygen of
-the cylinders. In the microscope she could see that there were fewer
-red cells left alive in the drop of his blood. The rate of fall was
-accelerating.</p>
-
-<p>She didn't have to glance at Max to know how he would look&mdash;skin pale,
-black eyebrows and keen brown eyes slightly squinted in thought, a
-faint ironical grin twisting the bluing lips. Intelligent, thin,
-sensitive, his face was part of her mind. It was inconceivable that
-Max could die. He couldn't die. He couldn't leave her alone.</p>
-
-<p>She forced her mind back to the problem. All the men of the <i>Explorer</i>
-were at the same point, wherever they were.</p>
-
-<p>Moving to Max's desk, she spoke into the intercom system: "Bess, send
-a couple of women to look through the ship, room by room, with a
-stretcher. Make sure all the men are down here." She remembered Reno.
-"Sparks, heard anything from Reno? Is he back?"</p>
-
-<p>Sparks replied weakly after a lag. "The last I heard from Reno was a
-call this morning. He was raving about mirrors, and Pat Mead's folks
-not being real people, just carbon copies, and claiming he was crazy;
-and I should send him the psychiatrist. I thought he was kidding. He
-didn't call back."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, Sparks." Reno was lost.</p>
-
-<p>Max dialed and spoke to the bridge over the phone. "Are you okay up
-there? Forget about engineering controls. Drop everything and head for
-the tanks while you can still walk."</p>
-
-<p>June went back to the work table and whispered into her own phone.
-"Bess, send up a stretcher for Max. He looks pretty bad."</p>
-
-<p>There had to be a solution. The life tanks could sustain life in a
-damaged body, encouraging it to regrow more rapidly, but they merely
-slowed death as long as the disease was not checked. The postponement
-could not last long, for destruction could go on steadily in the tanks
-until the nutritive solution would hold no life except the triumphant
-microscopic killers that caused melting sickness.</p>
-
-<p>There were very few red blood corpuscles in the microscope field now,
-incredibly few. She tipped the microscope and they began to drift,
-spinning slowly. A lone corpuscle floated through the center. She
-watched it as the current swept it in an arc past the dim off-focus
-bulk of the leucocyte. There was a sweep of motion and it vanished.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment it meant nothing to her; then she lifted her head from
-the microscope and looked around. Max sat at his desk, head in hand,
-his rumpled short black hair sticking out between his fingers at odd
-angles. A pencil and a pad scrawled with formulas lay on the desk
-before him. She could see his concentration in the rigid set of his
-shoulders. He was still thinking; he had not given up.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Max, I just saw a leucocyte grab a red blood corpuscle. It was
-unbelievably fast."</p>
-
-<p>"Leukemia," muttered Max without moving. "Galloping leukemia yet! That
-comes under the heading of cancer. Well, that's part of the answer. It
-might be all we need." He grinned feebly and reached for the speaker
-set. "Anybody still on his feet in there?" he muttered into it, and
-the question was amplified to a booming voice throughout the ship.
-"Hal, are you still going? Look, Hal, change all the dials, change the
-dials, set them to deep melt and regeneration. One week. This is like
-leukemia. Got it? This is like leukemia."</p>
-
-<p>June rose. It was time for her to take over the job. She leaned across
-his desk and spoke into the speaker system. "Doctor Walton talking,"
-she said. "This is to the women. Don't let any of the men work any
-more; they'll kill themselves. See that they all go into the tanks
-right away. Set the tank dials for deep regeneration. You can see how
-from the ones that are set."</p>
-
-<p>Two exhausted and frightened women clattered in the doorway with a
-stretcher. Their hands were scratched and oily from helping to set up
-tanks.</p>
-
-<p>"That order includes you," she told Max sternly and caught him as he
-swayed.</p>
-
-<p>Max saw the stretcher bearers and struggled upright. "Ten more
-minutes," he said clearly. "Might think of an idea. Something not right
-in this setup. I have to figure how to prevent a relapse, how the thing
-started."</p>
-
-<p>He knew more bacteriology than she did; she had to help him think. She
-motioned the bearers to wait, fixed a breathing mask for Max from a
-cylinder of CO<sub>2</sub> and the opened one of oxygen. Max went back to his
-desk.</p>
-
-<p>She walked up and down, trying to think, remembering the hamsters. The
-melting sickness, it was called. Melting. She struggled with an impulse
-to open a tank which held one of the men. She wanted to look in, see if
-that would explain the name.</p>
-
-<p>Melting Sickness....</p>
-
-<p>Footsteps came and Pat Mead stood uncertainly in the doorway. Tall,
-handsome, rugged, a pioneer. "Anything I can do?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>She barely looked at him. "You can stay out of our way. We're busy."</p>
-
-<p>"I'd like to help," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Very funny." She was vicious, enjoying the whip of her words. "Every
-man is dying because you're a carrier, and you want to help."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He stood nervously clenching and unclenching his hands. "A guinea pig,
-maybe. I'm immune. All the Meads are."</p>
-
-<p>"Go away." God, why couldn't she think? What makes a Mead immune?</p>
-
-<p>"Aw, let 'im alone," Max muttered. "Pat hasn't done anything." He went
-waveringly to the microscope, took a tiny sliver from his finger,
-suspended it in a slide and slipped it under the lens with detached
-habitual dexterity. "Something funny going on," he said to June.
-"Symptoms don't feel right."</p>
-
-<p>After a moment he straightened and motioned for her to look.
-"Leucocytes, phagocytes&mdash;" He was bewildered. "My own&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>She looked in, and then looked back at Pat in a growing wave of
-horror. "They're not your own, Max!" she whispered.</p>
-
-<p>Max rested a hand on the table to brace himself, put his eye to the
-microscope, and looked again. June knew what he saw. Phagocytes,
-leucocytes, attacking and devouring his tissues in a growing incredible
-horde, multiplying insanely.</p>
-
-<p><i>Not his phagocytes! Pat Mead's!</i> The Meads' evolved cells had learned
-too much. They were contagious. And not Pat Mead's.... How much alike
-<i>were</i> the Meads?... Mead cells contagious from one to another, not
-a disease attacking or being fought, but acting as normal leucocytes
-in whatever body they were in! The leucocytes of tall, red-headed
-people, finding no strangeness in the bloodstream of any of the tall,
-red-headed people. No strangeness.... A toti-potent leucocyte finding
-its way into cellular wombs.</p>
-
-<p>The womblike life tanks. For the men of the <i>Explorer</i>, a week's cure
-with deep melting to de-differentiate the leucocytes and turn them back
-to normal tissue, then regrowth and reforming from the cells that were
-there. From the cells that <i>were</i> there. <i>From the cells that were
-there....</i></p>
-
-<p>"Pat&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I know." Pat began to laugh, his face twisted with sudden
-understanding. "I understand. I get it. I'm a contagious personality.
-That's funny, isn't it?"</p>
-
-<p>Max rose suddenly from the microscope and lurched toward him, fists
-clenched. Pat caught him as he fell, and the bewildered stretcher
-bearers carried him out to the tanks.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For a week June tended the tanks. The other women volunteered to help,
-but she refused. She said nothing, hoping her guess would not be true.</p>
-
-<p>"Is everything all right?" Elsie asked her anxiously. "How is Jerry
-coming along?" Elsie looked haggard and worn, like all the women, from
-doing the work that the men had always done.</p>
-
-<p>"He's fine," June said tonelessly, shutting tight the door of the tank
-room. "They're all fine."</p>
-
-<p>"That's good," Elsie said, but she looked more frightened than before.</p>
-
-<p>June firmly locked the tank room door and the girl went away.</p>
-
-<p>The other women had been listening, and now they wandered back to
-their jobs, unsatisfied by June's answer, but not daring to ask for
-the actual truth. They were there whenever June went into the tank
-room, and they were still there&mdash;or relieved by others; June was
-not sure&mdash;when she came out. And always some one of them asked the
-unvarying question for all the others, and June gave the unvarying
-answer. But she kept the key. No woman but herself knew what was going
-on in the life tanks.</p>
-
-<p>Then the day of completion came. June told no one of the hour. She
-went into the room as on the other days, locked the door behind her,
-and there was the nightmare again. This time it was reality and she
-wandered down a path between long rows of coffinlike tanks, calling,
-"Max! Max!" silently and looking into each one as it opened.</p>
-
-<p>But each face she looked at was the same. Watching them dissolve and
-regrow in the nutrient solution, she had only been able to guess at the
-horror of what was happening. Now she knew.</p>
-
-<p>They were all the same lean-boned, blond-skinned face, with a
-pin-feather growth of reddish down on cheeks and scalp. All
-horribly&mdash;and handsomely&mdash;the same.</p>
-
-<p>A medical kit lay carelessly on the floor beside Max's tank. She stood
-near the bag. "Max," she said, and found her throat closing. The canned
-voice of the mechanical mocked her, speaking glibly about waking and
-sitting up. "I'm sorry, Max...."</p>
-
-<p>The tall man with rugged features and bright blue eyes sat up sleepily
-and lifted an eyebrow at her, and ran his hand over his red-fuzzed head
-in a gesture of bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter, June?" he asked drowsily.</p>
-
-<p>She gripped his arm. "Max&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>He compared the relative size of his arm with her hand and said
-wonderingly, "You shrank."</p>
-
-<p>"I know, Max. I know."</p>
-
-<p>He turned his head and looked at his arms and legs, pale blond arms
-and legs with a down of red hair. He touched the thick left arm,
-squeezed a pinch of hard flesh. "It isn't mine," he said, surprised.
-"But I can feel it."</p>
-
-<p>Watching his face was like watching a stranger mimicking and distorting
-Max's expressions. Max in fear. Max trying to understand what had
-happened to him, looking around at the other men sitting up in their
-tanks. Max feeling the terror that was in herself and all the men as
-they stared at themselves and their friends and saw what they had
-become.</p>
-
-<p>"We're all Pat Mead," he said harshly. "All the Meads are Pat Mead.
-That's why he was surprised to see people who didn't look like himself."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Max."</p>
-
-<p>"Max," he repeated. "It's me, all right. The nervous system didn't
-change." His new blue eyes held hers. "My love didn't, either. Did
-yours? Did it, June?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, Max." But she couldn't know yet. She had loved Max with the thin,
-ironic face, the rumpled black hair and the twisted smile that never
-really hid his quick sympathy. Now he was Pat Mead. Could he also be
-Max? "Of course I still love you, darling."</p>
-
-<p>He grinned. It was still the wry smile of Max, though fitting strangely
-on the handsome new blond face. "Then it isn't so bad. It might even be
-pretty good. I envied him this big, muscular body. If Pat or any of
-these Meads so much as looks at you, I'm going to knock his block off.
-Understand?"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>She laughed and couldn't stop. It wasn't that funny. But it was still
-Max, trying to be unafraid, drawing on humor. Maybe the rest of the men
-would also be their old selves, enough so the women would not feel that
-their men were strangers.</p>
-
-<p>Behind her, male voices spoke characteristically. She did not have
-to turn to know which was which: "This is one way to keep a guy from
-stealing your girl," that was Len Marlow; "I've got to write down all
-my reactions," Hal Barton; "Now I can really work that hillside vein of
-metal," St. Clair. Then others complaining, swearing, laughing bitterly
-at the trick that had been played on them and their flirting, tempted
-women. She knew who they were. Their women would know them apart, too.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll go outside," Max said. "You and I. Maybe the shock won't be so
-bad to the women after they see me." He paused. "You didn't tell them,
-did you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I couldn't. I wasn't sure. I&mdash;was hoping I was wrong."</p>
-
-<p>She opened the door and closed it quickly. There was a small crowd on
-the other side.</p>
-
-<p>"Hello, Pat," Elsie said uncertainly, trying to look past them into the
-tank room before the door shut.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm not Pat, I'm Max," said the tall man with the blue eyes and the
-fuzz-reddened skull. "Listen&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Good heavens, Pat, what happened to your hair?" Shelia asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm Max," insisted the man with the handsome face and the sharp blue
-eyes. "Don't you get it? I'm Max Stark. The melting sickness is Mead
-cells. We caught them from Pat. They adapted us to Minos. They also
-changed us all into Pat Mead."</p>
-
-<p>The women stared at him, at each other. They shook their heads.</p>
-
-<p>"They don't understand," June said. "I couldn't have if I hadn't seen
-it happening, Max."</p>
-
-<p>"It's Pat," said Shelia, dazedly stubborn. "He shaved off his hair.
-It's some kind of joke."</p>
-
-<p>Max shook her shoulders, glaring down at her face. "I'm Max. Max Stark.
-They all look like me. Do you hear? It's funny, but it's not a joke.
-Laugh for us, for God's sake!"</p>
-
-<p>"It's too much," said June. "They'll have to see."</p>
-
-<p>She opened the door and let them in. They hurried past her to the
-tanks, looking at forty-six identical blond faces, beginning to call in
-frightened voices:</p>
-
-<p>"Jerry!"</p>
-
-<p>"Harry!"</p>
-
-<p>"Lee, where are you, sweetheart&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>June shut the door on the voices that were growing hysterical, the
-women terrified and helpless, the men shouting to let the women know
-who they were.</p>
-
-<p>"It isn't easy," said Max, looking down at his own thick muscles. "But
-you aren't changed and the other girls aren't. That helps."</p>
-
-<p>Through the muffled noise and hysteria, a bell was ringing.</p>
-
-<p>"It's the airlock," June said.</p>
-
-<p>Peering in the viewplate were nine Meads from Alexandria. To all
-appearances, eight of them were Pat Mead at various ages, from fifteen
-to fifty, and the other was a handsome, leggy, red-headed girl who
-could have been his sister.</p>
-
-<p>Regretfully, they explained through the voice tube that they had walked
-over from Alexandria to bring news that the plane pilot had contracted
-melting sickness there and had died.</p>
-
-<p>They wanted to come in.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>June and Max told them to wait and returned to the tank room. The
-men were enjoying their new height and strength, and the women were
-bewilderedly learning that they could tell one Pat Mead from another,
-by voice, by gesture of face or hand. The panic was gone. In its place
-was a dull acceptance of the fantastic situation.</p>
-
-<p>Max called for attention. "There are nine Meads outside who want to
-come in. They have different names, but they're all Pat Mead."</p>
-
-<p>They frowned or looked blank, and George Barton asked, "Why didn't you
-let them in? I don't see any problem."</p>
-
-<p>"One of them," said Max soberly, "is a girl. <i>Patricia</i> Mead. The girl
-wants to come in."</p>
-
-<p>There was a long silence while the implication settled to the fear
-center of the women's minds. Shelia the beautiful felt it first. She
-cried, "No! Please don't let her in!" There was real fright in her tone
-and the women caught it quickly.</p>
-
-<p>Elsie clung to Jerry, begging, "You don't want me to change, do you,
-Jerry? You like me the way I am! Tell me you do!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The other girls backed away. It was illogical, but it was human. June
-felt terror rising in herself. She held up her hand for quiet, and
-presented the necessity to the group.</p>
-
-<p>"Only half of us can leave Minos," she said. "The men cannot eat
-ship food; they've been conditioned to this planet. We women can go,
-but we would have to go without our men. We can't go outside without
-contagion, and we can't spend the rest of our lives in quarantine
-inside the ship. George Barton is right&mdash;there is no problem."</p>
-
-<p>"But we'd be changed!" Shelia shrilled. "I don't want to become a Mead!
-I don't want to be somebody else!"</p>
-
-<p>She ran to the inner wall of the corridor. There was a brief
-hesitation, and then, one by one, the women fled to that side, until
-there were only Bess, June and four others left.</p>
-
-<p>"See!" cried Shelia. "A vote! We can't let the girl in!"</p>
-
-<p>No one spoke. To change, to be someone else&mdash;the idea was strange
-and horrifying. The men stood uneasily glancing at each other, as if
-looking into mirrors, and against the wall of the corridor the women
-watched in fear and huddled together, staring at the men. One man in
-forty-seven poses. One of them made a beseeching move toward Elsie and
-she shrank away.</p>
-
-<p>"No, Jerry! I won't let you change me!"</p>
-
-<p>Max stirred restlessly, the ironic smile that made his new face his own
-unconsciously twisting into a grimace of pity. "We men can't leave, and
-you women can't stay," he said bluntly. "Why not let Patricia Mead in.
-Get it over with!"</p>
-
-<p>June took a small mirror from her belt pouch and studied her own face,
-aware of Max talking forcefully, the men standing silent, the women
-pleading. Her face ... her own face with its dark blue eyes, small
-nose, long mobile lips ... the mind and the body are inseparable; the
-shape of a face is part of the mind. She put the mirror back.</p>
-
-<p>"I'd kill myself!" Shelia was sobbing. "I'd rather die!"</p>
-
-<p>"You won't die," Max was saying. "Can't you see there's only one
-solution&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>They were looking at Max. June stepped silently out of the tank room,
-and then turned and went to the airlock. She opened the valves that
-would let in Pat Mead's sister.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Contagion, by Katherine MacLean
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Contagion
-
-Author: Katherine MacLean
-
-Release Date: December 27, 2015 [EBook #50774]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CONTAGION ***
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-Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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-
-
-
-
- CONTAGION
-
- By KATHERINE MacLEAN
-
- [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
- Galaxy Science Fiction October 1950.
- Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
- the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
-
-
-
-
- Minos was such a lovely planet. Not a thing
- seemed wrong with it. Excepting the food,
- perhaps. And a disease that wasn't really.
-
-
-It was like an Earth forest in the fall, but it was not fall. The
-forest leaves were green and copper and purple and fiery red, and a
-wind sent patches of bright greenish sunlight dancing among the leaf
-shadows.
-
-The hunt party of the _Explorer_ filed along the narrow trail, guns
-ready, walking carefully, listening to the distant, half familiar cries
-of strange birds.
-
-A faint crackle of static in their earphones indicated that a gun had
-been fired.
-
-"Got anything?" asked June Walton. The helmet intercom carried her
-voice to the ears of the others without breaking the stillness of the
-forest.
-
-"Took a shot at something," explained George Barton's cheerful voice
-in her earphones. She rounded a bend of the trail and came upon Barton
-standing peering up into the trees, his gun still raised. "It looked
-like a duck."
-
-"This isn't Central Park," said Hal Barton, his brother, coming into
-sight. His green spacesuit struck an incongruous note against the
-bronze and red forest. "They won't all look like ducks," he said
-soberly.
-
-"Maybe some will look like dragons. Don't get eaten by a dragon,
-June," came Max's voice quietly into her earphones. "Not while I still
-love you." He came out of the trees carrying the blood sample kit, and
-touched her glove with his, the grin on his ugly beloved face barely
-visible in the mingled light and shade. A patch of sunlight struck a
-greenish glint from his fishbowl helmet.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They walked on. A quarter of a mile back, the space ship _Explorer_
-towered over the forest like a tapering skyscraper, and the people of
-the ship looked out of the viewplates at fresh winds and sunlight and
-clouds, and they longed to be outside.
-
-But the likeness to Earth was danger, and the cool wind might be death,
-for if the animals were like Earth animals, their diseases might be
-like Earth diseases, alike enough to be contagious, different enough to
-be impossible to treat. There was warning enough in the past. Colonies
-had vanished, and traveled spaceways drifted with the corpses of ships
-which had touched on some plague planet.
-
-The people of the ship waited while their doctors, in airtight
-spacesuits, hunted animals to test them for contagion.
-
-The four medicos, for June Walton was also a doctor, filed through the
-alien homelike forest, walking softly, watching for motion among the
-copper and purple shadows.
-
-They saw it suddenly, a lighter moving copper patch among the darker
-browns. Reflex action swung June's gun into line, and behind her
-someone's gun went off with a faint crackle of static, and made a hole
-in the leaves beside the specimen. Then for a while no one moved.
-
-This one looked like a man, a magnificently muscled, leanly graceful,
-humanlike animal. Even in its callused bare feet, it was a head taller
-than any of them. Red-haired, hawk-faced and darkly tanned, it stood
-breathing heavily, looking at them without expression. At its side hung
-a sheath knife, and a crossbow was slung across one wide shoulder.
-
-They lowered their guns.
-
-"It needs a shave," Max said reasonably in their earphones, and he
-reached up to his helmet and flipped the switch that let his voice be
-heard. "Something we could do for you, Mac?"
-
-The friendly drawl was the first voice that had broken the forest
-sounds. June smiled suddenly. He was right. The strict logic of
-evolution did not demand beards; therefore a non-human would not be
-wearing a three day growth of red stubble.
-
-Still panting, the tall figure licked dry lips and spoke. "Welcome to
-Minos. The Mayor sends greetings from Alexandria."
-
-"English?" gasped June.
-
-"We were afraid you would take off again before I could bring word to
-you.... It's three hundred miles.... We saw your scout plane pass
-twice, but we couldn't attract its attention."
-
- * * * * *
-
-June looked in stunned silence at the stranger leaning against the
-tree. Thirty-six light years--thirty-six times six trillion miles
-of monotonous space travel--to be told that the planet was already
-settled! "We didn't know there was a colony here," she said. "It is not
-on the map."
-
-"We were afraid of that," the tall bronze man answered soberly. "We
-have been here three generations and yet no traders have come."
-
-Max shifted the kit strap on his shoulder and offered a hand. "My name
-is Max Stark, M.D. This is June Walton, M.D., Hal Barton, M.D., and
-George Barton, Hal's brother, also M.D."
-
-"Patrick Mead is the name," smiled the man, shaking hands casually.
-"Just a hunter and bridge carpenter myself. Never met any medicos
-before."
-
-The grip was effortless but even through her airproofed glove June
-could feel that the fingers that touched hers were as hard as padded
-steel.
-
-"What--what is the population of Minos?" she asked.
-
-He looked down at her curiously for a moment before answering. "Only
-one hundred and fifty." He smiled. "Don't worry, this isn't a city
-planet yet. There's room for a few more people." He shook hands with
-the Bartons quickly. "That is--you are people, aren't you?" he asked
-startlingly.
-
-"Why not?" said Max with a poise that June admired.
-
-"Well, you are all so--so--" Patrick Mead's eyes roamed across the
-faces of the group. "So varied."
-
-They could find no meaning in that, and stood puzzled.
-
-"I mean," Patrick Mead said into the silence, "all these--interesting
-different hair colors and face shapes and so forth--" He made a vague
-wave with one hand as if he had run out of words or was anxious not to
-insult them.
-
-"Joke?" Max asked, bewildered.
-
-June laid a hand on his arm. "No harm meant," she said to him over the
-intercom. "We're just as much of a shock to him as he is to us."
-
-She addressed a question to the tall colonist on outside sound. "What
-should a person look like, Mr. Mead?"
-
-He indicated her with a smile. "Like you."
-
-June stepped closer and stood looking up at him, considering her own
-description. She was tall and tanned, like him; had a few freckles,
-like him; and wavy red hair, like his. She ignored the brightly
-humorous blue eyes.
-
-"In other words," she said, "everyone on the planet looks like you and
-me?"
-
-Patrick Mead took another look at their four faces and began to grin.
-"Like me, I guess. But I hadn't thought of it before. I did not think
-that people could have different colored hair or that noses could fit
-so many ways onto faces. I was judging by my own appearance, but I
-suppose any fool can walk on his hands and say the world is upside
-down!" He laughed and sobered. "But then why wear spacesuits? The air
-is breathable."
-
-"For safety," June told him. "We can't take any chances on plague."
-
-Pat Mead was wearing nothing but a loin cloth and his weapons, and the
-wind ruffled his hair. He looked comfortable, and they longed to take
-off the stuffy spacesuits and feel the wind against their own skins.
-Minos was like home, like Earth.... But they were strangers.
-
-"Plague," Pat Mead said thoughtfully. "We had one here. It came two
-years after the colony arrived and killed everyone except the Mead
-families. They were immune. I guess we look alike because we're all
-related, and that's why I grew up thinking that it is the only way
-people can look."
-
-_Plague._ "What was the disease?" Hal Barton asked.
-
-"Pretty gruesome, according to my father. They called it the melting
-sickness. The doctors died too soon to find out what it was or what to
-do about it."
-
-"You should have trained for more doctors, or sent to civilization for
-some." A trace of impatience was in George Barton's voice.
-
-Pat Mead explained patiently, "Our ship, with the power plant and all
-the books we needed, went off into the sky to avoid the contagion,
-and never came back. The crew must have died." Long years of hardship
-were indicated by that statement, a colony with electric power gone
-and machinery stilled, with key technicians dead and no way to replace
-them. June realized then the full meaning of the primitive sheath knife
-and bow.
-
-"Any recurrence of melting sickness?" asked Hal Barton.
-
-"No."
-
-"Any other diseases?"
-
-"Not a one."
-
-Max was eyeing the bronze red-headed figure with something approaching
-awe. "Do you think all the Meads look like that?" he said to June on
-the intercom. "I wouldn't mind being a Mead myself!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Their job had been made easy by the coming of Pat. They went back to
-the ship laughing, exchanging anecdotes with him. There was nothing
-now to keep Minos from being the home they wanted, except the melting
-sickness, and, forewarned against it, they could take precautions.
-
-The polished silver and black column of the _Explorer_ seemed to rise
-higher and higher over the trees as they neared it. Then its symmetry
-blurred all sense of specific size as they stepped out from among the
-trees and stood on the edge of the meadow, looking up.
-
-"Nice!" said Pat. "Beautiful!" The admiration in his voice was warming.
-
-"It was a yacht," Max said, still looking up, "second hand, an old-time
-beauty without a sign of wear. Synthetic diamond-studded control board
-and murals on the walls. It doesn't have the new speed drives, but it
-brought us thirty-six light years in one and a half subjective years.
-Plenty good enough."
-
-The tall tanned man looked faintly wistful, and June realized that
-he had never had access to a full library, never seen a movie, never
-experienced luxury. He had been born and raised on Minos.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"May I go aboard?" Pat asked hopefully.
-
-Max unslung the specimen kit from his shoulder, laid it on the carpet
-of plants that covered the ground and began to open it.
-
-"Tests first," Hal Barton said. "We have to find out if you people
-still carry this so-called melting sickness. We'll have to de-microbe
-you and take specimens before we let you on board. Once on, you'll be
-no good as a check for what the other Meads might have."
-
-Max was taking out a rack and a stand of preservative bottles and
-hypodermics.
-
-"Are you going to jab me with those?" Pat asked with interest.
-
-"You're just a specimen animal to me, bud!" Max grinned at Pat Mead,
-and Pat grinned back. June saw that they were friends already, the
-tall pantherish colonist, and the wry, black-haired doctor. She felt a
-stab of guilt because she loved Max and yet could pity him for being
-smaller and frailer than Pat Mead.
-
-"Lie down," Max told him, "and hold still. We need two spinal fluid
-samples from the back, a body cavity one in front, and another from the
-arm."
-
-Pat lay down obediently. Max knelt, and, as he spoke, expertly swabbed
-and inserted needles with the smooth speed that had made him a fine
-nerve surgeon on Earth.
-
-High above them the scout helioplane came out of an opening in the ship
-and angled off toward the west, its buzz diminishing. Then, suddenly,
-it veered and headed back, and Reno Unrich's voice came tinnily from
-their earphones:
-
-"What's that you've got? Hey, what are you docs doing down there?" He
-banked again and came to a stop, hovering fifty feet away. June could
-see his startled face looking through the glass at Pat.
-
-Hal Barton switched to a narrow radio beam, explained rapidly and
-pointed in the direction of Alexandria. Reno's plane lifted and flew
-away over the odd-colored forest.
-
-"The plane will drop a note on your town, telling them you got
-through to us," Hal Barton told Pat, who was sitting up watching Max
-dexterously put the blood and spinal fluids into the right bottles
-without exposing them to air.
-
-"We won't be free to contact your people until we know if they still
-carry melting sickness," Max added. "You might be immune so it doesn't
-show on you, but still carry enough germs--if that's what caused it--to
-wipe out a planet."
-
-"If you do carry melting sickness," said Hal Barton, "we won't be able
-to mingle with your people until we've cleared them of the disease."
-
-"Starting with me?" Pat asked.
-
-"Starting with you," Max told him ruefully, "as soon as you step on
-board."
-
-"More needles?"
-
-"Yes, and a few little extras thrown in."
-
-"Rough?"
-
-"It isn't easy."
-
-A few minutes later, standing in the stalls for spacesuit
-decontamination, being buffeted by jets of hot disinfectant, bathed in
-glares of sterilizing ultraviolet radiation, June remembered that and
-compared Pat Mead's treatment to theirs.
-
-In the _Explorer_, stored carefully in sealed tanks and containers,
-was the ultimate, multi-purpose cureall. It was a solution of enzymes
-so like the key catalysts of the human cell nucleus that it caused
-chemical derangement and disintegration in any non-human cell. Nothing
-could live in contact with it but human cells; any alien intruder to
-the body would die. Nucleocat Cureall was its trade name.
-
-But the cureall alone was not enough for complete safety. Plagues had
-been known to slay too rapidly and universally to be checked by human
-treatment. Doctors are not reliable; they die. Therefore spaceways and
-interplanetary health law demanded that ship equipment for guarding
-against disease be totally mechanical in operation, rapid and efficient.
-
-Somewhere near them, in a series of stalls which led around and
-around like a rabbit maze, Pat was being herded from stall to stall
-by peremptory mechanical voices, directed to soap and shower, ordered
-to insert his arm into a slot which took a sample of his blood, given
-solutions to drink, bathed in germicidal ultraviolet, shaken by sonic
-blasts, breathing air thick with sprays of germicidal mists, being
-directed to put his arms into other slots where they were anesthesized
-and injected with various immunizing solutions.
-
-Finally, he would be put in a room of high temperature and extreme
-dryness, and instructed to sit for half an hour while more fluids were
-dripped into his veins through long thin tubes.
-
-All legal spaceships were built for safety. No chance was taken of
-allowing a suspected carrier to bring an infection on board with him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-June stepped from the last shower stall into the locker room, zipped
-off her spacesuit with a sigh of relief, and contemplated herself in a
-wall mirror. Red hair, dark blue eyes, tall....
-
-"I've got a good figure," she said thoughtfully.
-
-Max turned at the door. "Why this sudden interest in your looks?" he
-asked suspiciously. "Do we stand here and admire you, or do we finally
-get something to eat?"
-
-"Wait a minute." She went to a wall phone and dialed it carefully,
-using a combination from the ship's directory. "How're you doing, Pat?"
-
-The phone picked up a hissing of water or spray. There was a startled
-chuckle. "Voices, too! Hello, June. How do you tell a machine to go
-jump in the lake?"
-
-"Are you hungry?"
-
-"No food since yesterday."
-
-"We'll have a banquet ready for you when you get out," she told Pat and
-hung up, smiling. Pat Mead's voice had a vitality and enjoyment which
-made shipboard talk sound like sad artificial gaiety in contrast.
-
-They looked into the nearby small laboratory where twelve squealing
-hamsters were protestingly submitting to a small injection each of
-Pat's blood. In most of them the injection was followed by one of
-antihistaminics and adaptives. Otherwise the hamster defense system
-would treat all non-hamster cells as enemies, even the harmless human
-blood cells, and fight back against them violently.
-
-One hamster, the twelfth, was given an extra large dose of adaptive,
-so that if there were a disease, he would not fight it or the human
-cells, and thus succumb more rapidly.
-
-"How ya doing, George?" Max asked.
-
-"Routine," George Barton grunted absently.
-
-On the way up the long spiral ramps to the dining hall, they passed a
-viewplate. It showed a long scene of mountains in the distance on the
-horizon, and between them, rising step by step as they grew farther
-away, the low rolling hills, bronze and red with patches of clear green
-where there were fields.
-
-Someone was looking out, standing very still, as if she had been
-there a long time--Bess St. Clair, a Canadian woman. "It looks like
-Winnipeg," she told them as they paused. "When are you doctors going to
-let us out of this blithering barberpole? Look," she pointed. "See that
-patch of field on the south hillside, with the brook winding through
-it? I've staked that hillside for our house. When do we get out?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Reno Ulrich's tiny scout plane buzzed slowly in from the distance and
-began circling lazily.
-
-"Sooner than you think," Max told her. "We've discovered a castaway
-colony on the planet. They've done our tests for us by just living
-here. If there's anything here to catch, they've caught it."
-
-"People on Minos?" Bess's handsome ruddy face grew alive with
-excitement.
-
-"One of them is down in the medical department," June said. "He'll be
-out in twenty minutes."
-
-"May I go see him?"
-
-"Sure," said Max. "Show him the way to the dining hall when he gets
-out. Tell him we sent you."
-
-"Right!" She turned and ran down the ramp like a small girl going to a
-fire. Max grinned at June and she grinned back. After a year and a half
-of isolation in space, everyone was hungry for the sight of new faces,
-the sound of unfamiliar voices.
-
- * * * * *
-
-They climbed the last two turns to the cafeteria, and entered to a rich
-subdued blend of soft music and quiet conversations. The cafeteria
-was a section of the old dining room, left when the rest of the ship
-had been converted to living and working quarters, and it still had
-the original finely grained wood of the ceiling and walls, the sound
-absorbency, the soft music spools and the intimate small light at each
-table where people leisurely ate and talked.
-
-They stood in line at the hot foods counter, and behind her June
-could hear a girl's voice talking excitedly through the murmur of
-conversation.
-
-"--new man, honest! I saw him through the viewplate when they came in.
-He's down in the medical department. A real frontiersman."
-
-The line drew abreast of the counters, and she and Max chose three
-heaping trays, starting with hydroponic mushroom steak, raised in
-the growing trays of water and chemicals; sharp salad bowl with rose
-tomatoes and aromatic peppers; tank-grown fish with special sauce; four
-different desserts, and assorted beverages.
-
-Presently they had three tottering trays successfully maneuvered to a
-table. Brant St. Clair came over. "I beg your pardon, Max, but they are
-saying something about Reno carrying messages to a colony of savages,
-for the medical department. Will he be back soon, do you know?"
-
-Max smiled up at him, his square face affectionate. Everyone liked the
-shy Canadian. "He's back already. We just saw him come in."
-
-"Oh, fine." St. Clair beamed. "I had an appointment with him to go out
-and confirm what looks like a nice vein of iron to the northeast. Have
-you seen Bess? Oh--there she is." He turned swiftly and hurried away.
-
-A very tall man with fiery red hair came in surrounded by an eagerly
-talking crowd of ship people. It was Pat Mead. He stood in the doorway,
-alertly scanning the dining room. Sheer vitality made him seem even
-larger than he was. Sighting June, he smiled and began to thread toward
-their table.
-
-"Look!" said someone. "There's the colonist!" Shelia, a pretty, jeweled
-woman, followed and caught his arm. "Did you _really_ swim across a
-river to come here?"
-
-Overflowing with good-will and curiosity, people approached from all
-directions. "Did you actually walk three hundred miles? Come, eat with
-us. Let me help choose your tray."
-
-Everyone wanted him to eat at their table, everyone was a specialist
-and wanted data about Minos. They all wanted anecdotes about hunting
-wild animals with a bow and arrow.
-
-"He needs to be rescued," Max said. "He won't have a chance to eat."
-
-June and Max got up firmly, edged through the crowd, captured Pat and
-escorted him back to their table. June found herself pleased to be
-claiming the hero of the hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Pat sat in the simple, subtly designed chair and leaned back almost
-voluptuously, testing the way it gave and fitted itself to him. He
-ran his eyes over the bright tableware and heaped plates. He looked
-around at the rich grained walls and soft lights at each table. He said
-nothing, just looking and feeling and experiencing.
-
-"When we build our town and leave the ship," June explained, "we
-will turn all the staterooms back into the lounges and ballrooms and
-cocktail bars that used to be inside."
-
-"Oh, I'm not complaining," Pat said negligently. He cocked his head to
-the music, and tried to locate its source.
-
-"That's big of you," said Max with gentle irony.
-
-They fell to, Pat beginning the first meal he had had in more than a
-day.
-
-Most of the other diners finished when they were halfway through,
-and began walking over, diffidently at first, then in another wave
-of smiling faces, handshakes, and introductions. Pat was asked about
-crops, about farming methods, about rainfall and floods, about farm
-animals and plant breeding, about the compatibility of imported Earth
-seeds with local ground, about mines and strata.
-
-There was no need to protect him. He leaned back in his chair and
-drawled answers with the lazy ease of a panther; where he could think
-of no statistic, he would fill the gap with an anecdote. It developed
-that he enjoyed spinning campfire yarns and especially being the center
-of interest.
-
-Between bouts of questions, he ate with undiminished and glowing relish.
-
-June noticed that the female specialists were prolonging the questions
-more than they needed, clustering around the table laughing at his
-jokes, until presently Pat was almost surrounded by pretty faces,
-eager questions, and chiming laughs. Shelia the beautiful laughed most
-chimingly of all.
-
-June nudged Max, and Max shrugged indifferently. It wasn't anything a
-man would pay attention to, perhaps. But June watched Pat for a moment
-more, then glanced uneasily back to Max. He was eating and listening
-to Pat's answers and did not feel her gaze. For some reason Max looked
-almost shrunken to her. He was shorter than she had realized; she had
-forgotten that he was only the same height as herself. She was dimly
-aware of the clear lilting chatter of female voices increasing at Pat's
-end of the table.
-
-"That guy's a menace," Max said, and laughed to himself, cutting
-another slice of hydroponic mushroom steak. "What's eating you?" he
-added, glancing aside at her when he noticed her sudden stillness.
-
-"Nothing," she said hastily, but she did not turn back to watching Pat
-Mead. She felt disloyal. Pat was only a superb animal. Max was the man
-she loved. Or--was he? Of course he was, she told herself angrily.
-They had gone colonizing together because they wanted to spend their
-lives together; she had never thought of marrying any other man. Yet
-the sense of dissatisfaction persisted, and along with it a feeling of
-guilt.
-
-Len Marlow, the protein tank-culture technician responsible for the
-mushroom steaks, had wormed his way into the group and asked Pat a
-question. Now he was saying, "I don't dig you, Pat. It sounds like
-you're putting the people into the tanks instead of the vegetables!" He
-glanced at them, looking puzzled. "See if you two can make anything of
-this. It sounds medical to me."
-
-Pat leaned back and smiled, sipping a glass of hydroponic burgundy.
-"Wonderful stuff. You'll have to show us how to make it."
-
-Len turned back to him. "You people live off the country, right? You
-hunt and bring in steaks and eat them, right? Well, say I have one of
-those steaks right here and I want to eat it, what happens?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Go ahead and eat it. It just wouldn't digest. You'd stay hungry."
-
-"Why?" Len was aggrieved.
-
-"Chemical differences in the basic protoplasm of Minos. Different
-amino linkages, left-handed instead of right-handed molecules in the
-carbohydrates, things like that. Nothing will be digestible here until
-you are adapted chemically by a little test-tube evolution. Till then
-you'd starve to death on a full stomach."
-
-Pat's side of the table had been loaded with the dishes from two trays,
-but it was almost clear now and the dishes were stacked neatly to one
-side. He started on three desserts, thoughtfully tasting each in turn.
-
-"Test-tube evolution?" Max repeated. "What's that? I thought you people
-had no doctors."
-
-"It's a story." Pat leaned back again. "Alexander P. Mead, the head of
-the Mead clan, was a plant geneticist, a very determined personality
-and no man to argue with. He didn't want us to go through the struggle
-of killing off all Minos plants and putting in our own, spoiling the
-face of the planet and upsetting the balance of its ecology. He decided
-that he would adapt our genes to this planet or kill us trying. He did
-it all right.'"
-
-"Did which?" asked June, suddenly feeling a sourceless prickle of fear.
-
-"Adapted us to Minos. He took human cells--"
-
- * * * * *
-
-She listened intently, trying to find a reason for fear in the
-explanation. It would have taken many human generations to adapt to
-Minos by ordinary evolution, and that only at a heavy toll of death and
-hunger which evolution exacts. There was a shorter way: Human cells
-have the ability to return to their primeval condition of independence,
-hunting, eating and reproducing alone.
-
-Alexander P. Mead took human cells and made them into phagocytes.
-He put them through the hard savage school of evolution--a thousand
-generations of multiplication, hardship and hunger, with the alien
-indigestible food always present, offering its reward of plenty to the
-cell that reluctantly learned to absorb it.
-
-"Leucocytes can run through several thousand generations of evolution
-in six months," Pat Mead finished. "When they reached to a point where
-they would absorb Minos food, he planted them back in the people he
-had taken them from."
-
-"What was supposed to happen then?" Max asked, leaning forward.
-
-"I don't know exactly how it worked. He never told anybody much about
-it, and when I was a little boy he had gone loco and was wandering
-ha-ha-ing around waving a test tube. Fell down a ravine and broke his
-neck at the age of eighty."
-
-"A character," Max said.
-
-Why was she afraid? "It worked then?"
-
-"Yes. He tried it on all the Meads the first year. The other settlers
-didn't want to be experimented on until they saw how it worked out. It
-worked. The Meads could hunt, and plant while the other settlers were
-still eating out of hydroponics tanks."
-
-"It worked," said Max to Len. "You're a plant geneticist and a tank
-culture expert. There's a job for you."
-
-"Uh-_uh_!" Len backed away. "It sounds like a medical problem to me.
-Human cell control--right up your alley."
-
-"It is a one-way street," Pat warned. "Once it is done, you won't be
-able to digest ship food. I'll get no good from this protein. I ate it
-just for the taste."
-
-Hal Barton appeared quietly beside the table. "Three of the twelve test
-hamsters have died," he reported, and turned to Pat. "Your people carry
-the germs of melting sickness, as you call it. The dead hamsters were
-injected with blood taken from you before you were de-infected. We
-can't settle here unless we de-infect everybody on Minos. Would they
-object?"
-
-"We wouldn't want to give you folks germs," Pat smiled. "Anything for
-safety. But there'll have to be a vote on it first."
-
-The doctors went to Reno Ulrich's table and walked with him to the
-hangar, explaining. He was to carry the proposal to Alexandria, mingle
-with the people, be persuasive and wait for them to vote before
-returning. He was to give himself shots of cureall every two hours on
-the hour or run the risk of disease.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Reno was pleased. He had dabbled in sociology before retraining as a
-mechanic for the expedition. "This gives me a chance to study their
-mores." He winked wickedly. "I may not be back for several nights."
-They watched through the viewplate as he took off, and then went over
-to the laboratory for a look at the hamsters.
-
-Three were alive and healthy, munching lettuce. One was the control;
-the other two had been given shots of Pat's blood from before he
-entered the ship, but with no additional treatment. Apparently a
-hamster could fight off melting sickness easily if left alone. Three
-were still feverish and ruffled, with a low red blood count, but
-recovering. The three dead ones had been given strong shots of adaptive
-and counter histamine, so their bodies had not fought back against the
-attack.
-
-June glanced at the dead animals hastily and looked away again.
-They lay twisted with a strange semi-fluid limpness, as if ready to
-dissolve. The last hamster, which had been given the heaviest dose
-of adaptive, had apparently lost all its hair before death. It was
-hairless and pink, like a still-born baby.
-
-"We can find no micro-organisms," George Barton said. "None at all.
-Nothing in the body that should not be there. Leucosis and anemia.
-Fever only for the ones that fought it off." He handed Max some
-temperature charts and graphs of blood counts.
-
-June wandered out into the hall. Pediatrics and obstetrics were her
-field; she left the cellular research to Max, and just helped him with
-laboratory routine. The strange mood followed her out into the hall,
-then abruptly lightened.
-
-Coming toward her, busily telling a tale of adventure to the gorgeous
-Shelia Davenport, was a tall, red-headed, magnificently handsome man.
-It was his handsomeness which made Pat such a pleasure to look upon
-and talk with, she guiltily told herself, and it was his tremendous
-vitality.... It was like meeting a movie hero in the flesh, or a hero
-out of the pages of a book--Deer-slayer, John Clayton, Lord Greystoke.
-
-She waited in the doorway to the laboratory and made no move to join
-them, merely acknowledged the two with a nod and a smile and a casual
-lift of the hand. They nodded and smiled back.
-
-"Hello, June," said Pat and continued telling his tale, but as they
-passed he lightly touched her arm.
-
-"Oh, pioneer!" she said mockingly and softly to his passing profile,
-and knew that he had heard.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That night she had a nightmare. She was running down a long corridor
-looking for Max, but every man she came to was a big bronze man with
-red hair and bright blue eyes who grinned at her.
-
-The pink hamster! She woke suddenly, feeling as if alarm bells had been
-ringing, and listened carefully, but there was no sound. She had had a
-nightmare, she told herself, but alarm bells were still ringing in her
-unconscious. Something was wrong.
-
-Lying still and trying to preserve the images, she groped for a
-meaning, but the mood faded under the cold touch of reason. Damn
-intuitive thinking! A pink hamster! Why did the unconscious have to be
-so vague? She fell asleep again and forgot.
-
-They had lunch with Pat Mead that day, and after it was over Pat
-delayed June with a hand on her shoulder and looked down at her for a
-moment. "I want you, June," he said and then turned away, answering the
-hails of a party at another table as if he had not spoken. She stood
-shaken, and then walked to the door where Max waited.
-
-She was particularly affectionate with Max the rest of the day, and it
-pleased him. He would not have been if he had known why. She tried to
-forget Pat's blunt statement.
-
-June was in the laboratory with Max, watching the growth of a small
-tank culture of the alien protoplasm from a Minos weed, and listening
-to Len Marlow pour out his troubles.
-
-"And Elsie tags around after that big goof all day, listening to his
-stories. And then she tells me I'm just jealous, I'm imagining things!"
-He passed his hand across his eyes. "I came away from Earth to be with
-Elsie.... I'm getting a headache. Look, can't you persuade Pat to cut
-it out, June? You and Max are his friends."
-
-"Here, have an aspirin," June said. "We'll see what we can do."
-
-"Thanks." Len picked up his tank culture and went out, not at all
-cheered.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Max sat brooding over the dials and meters at his end of the
-laboratory, apparently sunk in thought. When Len had gone, he spoke
-almost harshly.
-
-"Why encourage the guy? Why let him hope?"
-
-"Found out anything about the differences in protoplasm?" she evaded.
-
-"Why let him kid himself? What chance has he got against that hunk of
-muscle and smooth talk?"
-
-"But Pat isn't after Elsie," she protested.
-
-"Every scatter-brained woman on this ship is trailing after Pat with
-her tongue hanging out. Brant St. Clair is in the bar right now.
-He doesn't say what he is drinking about, but do you think Pat is
-resisting all these women crowding down on him?"
-
-"There are other things besides looks and charm," she said, grimly
-trying to concentrate on a slide under her binocular microscope.
-
-"Yeah, and whatever they are, Pat has them, too. Who's more competent
-to support a woman and a family on a frontier planet than a handsome
-bruiser who was born here?"
-
-"I meant," June spun around on her stool with unexpected passion,
-"there is old friendship, and there's fondness, and memories, and
-loyalty!" She was half shouting.
-
-"They're not worth much on the second-hand market," Max said. He was
-sitting slumped on his lab stool, looking dully at his dials. "Now
-_I'm_ getting a headache!" He smiled ruefully. "No kidding, a real
-headache. And over other people's troubles yet!"
-
-Other people's troubles.... She got up and wandered out into the long
-curving halls. "I want you June," Pat's voice repeated in her mind.
-Why did the man have to be so overpoweringly attractive, so glaring a
-contrast to Max? Why couldn't the universe manage to run on without
-generating troublesome love triangles?
-
- * * * * *
-
-She walked up the curving ramps to the dining hall where they had eaten
-and drunk and talked yesterday. It was empty except for one couple
-talking forehead to forehead over cold coffee.
-
-She turned and wandered down the long easy spiral of corridor to
-the pharmacy and dispensary. It was empty. George was probably in
-the test lab next door, where he could hear if he was wanted. The
-automatic vendor of harmless euphorics, stimulants and opiates stood
-in the corner, brightly decorated in pastel abstract designs, with its
-automatic tabulator graph glowing above it.
-
-Max had a headache, she remembered. She recorded her thumbprint in the
-machine and pushed the plunger for a box of aspirins, trying to focus
-her attention on the problem of adapting the people of the ship to
-the planet Minos. An aquarium tank with a faint solution of histamine
-would be enough to convert a piece of human skin into a community of
-voracious active phagocytes individually seeking something to devour,
-but could they eat enough to live away from the rich sustaining plasma
-of human blood?
-
-After the aspirins, she pushed another plunger for something for
-herself. Then she stood looking at it, a small box with three pills in
-her hand--Theobromine, a heart strengthener and a confidence-giving
-euphoric all in one, something to steady shaky nerves. She had used it
-before only in emergency. She extended a hand and looked at it. It was
-trembling. Damn triangles!
-
-While she was looking at her hand there was a click from the automatic
-drug vendor. It summed the morning use of each drug in the vendors
-throughout the ship, and recorded it in a neat addition to the end of
-each graph line. For a moment she could not find the green line for
-anodynes and the red line for stimulants, and then she saw that they
-went almost straight up.
-
-There were too many being used--far too many to be explained by
-jealousy or psychosomatic peevishness. This was an epidemic, and only
-one disease was possible!
-
-The disinfecting of Pat had not succeeded. Nucleocat Cureall, killer of
-all infections, had not cured! Pat had brought melting sickness into
-the ship with him!
-
-Who had it?
-
-The drugs vendor glowed cheerfully, uncommunicative. She opened a
-panel in its side and looked in on restless interlacing cogs, and on
-the inside of the door saw printed some directions.... "To remove or
-examine records before reaching end of the reel--"
-
-After a few fumbling minutes she had the answer. In the cafeteria at
-breakfast and lunch, thirty-eight men out of the forty-eight aboard
-ship had taken more than his norm of stimulant. Twenty-one had taken
-aspirin as well. The only woman who had made an unusual purchase was
-herself!
-
-She remembered the hamsters that had thrown off the infection with a
-short sharp fever, and checked back in the records to the day before.
-There was a short rise in aspirin sales to women at late afternoon. The
-women were safe.
-
-It was the men who had melting sickness!
-
-Melting sickness killed in hours, according to Pat Mead. How long had
-the men been sick?
-
- * * * * *
-
-As she was leaving, Jerry came into the pharmacy, recorded his
-thumbprint and took a box of aspirin from the machine.
-
-She felt all right. Self-control was working well and it was pleasant
-still to walk down the corridor smiling at the people who passed.
-She took the emergency elevator to the control room and showed her
-credentials to the technician on watch.
-
-"Medical Emergency." At a small control panel in the corner was a large
-red button, precisely labeled. She considered it and picked up the
-control room phone. This was the hard part, telling someone, especially
-someone who had it--Max.
-
-She dialed, and when the click on the end of the line showed he had
-picked the phone up, she told Max what she had seen.
-
-"No women, just the men," he repeated. "That right?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Probably it's chemically alien, inhibited by one of the female sex
-hormones. We'll try sex hormone shots, if we have to. Where are you
-calling from?"
-
-She told him.
-
-"That's right. Give Nucleocat Cureall another chance. It might work
-this time. Push that button."
-
-She went to the panel and pushed the large red button. Through the
-long height of the _Explorer_, bells woke to life and began to ring
-in frightened clangor, emergency doors thumped shut, mechanical
-apparatus hummed into life and canned voices began to give rapid urgent
-directions.
-
-A plague had come.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She obeyed the mechanical orders, went out into the hall and walked in
-line with the others. The captain walked ahead of her and the gorgeous
-Shelia Davenport fell into step beside her. "I look like a positive hag
-this morning. Does that mean I'm sick? Are we all sick?"
-
-June shrugged, unwilling to say what she knew.
-
-Others came out of all rooms into the corridor, thickening the line.
-They could hear each room lock as the last person left it, and then,
-faintly, the hiss of disinfectant spray. Behind them, on the heels of
-the last person in line, segments of the ship slammed off and began to
-hiss.
-
-They wound down the spiral corridor until they reached the medical
-treatment section again, and there they waited in line.
-
-"It won't scar my arms, will it?" asked Shelia apprehensively,
-glancing at her smooth, lovely arms.
-
-The mechanical voice said, "Next. Step inside, please, and stand clear
-of the door."
-
-"Not a bit," June reassured Shelia, and stepped into the cubicle.
-
-Inside, she was directed from cubicle to cubicle and given the usual
-buffeting by sprays and radiation, had blood samples taken and was
-injected with Nucleocat and a series of other protectives. At last she
-was directed through another door into a tiny cubicle with a chair.
-
-"You are to wait here," commanded the recorded voice metallically. "In
-twenty minutes the door will unlock and you may then leave. All people
-now treated may visit all parts of the ship which have been protected.
-It is forbidden to visit any quarantined or unsterile part of the ship
-without permission from the medical officers."
-
-Presently the door unlocked and she emerged into bright lights again,
-feeling slightly battered.
-
-She was in the clinic. A few men sat on the edge of beds and looked
-sick. One was lying down. Brant and Bess St. Clair sat near each other,
-not speaking.
-
-Approaching her was George Barton, reading a thermometer with a puzzled
-expression.
-
-"What is it, George?" she asked anxiously.
-
-"Some of the women have slight fever, but it's going down. None of the
-fellows have any--but their white count is way up, their red count is
-way down, and they look sick to me."
-
-She approached St. Clair. His usually ruddy cheeks were pale, his pulse
-was light and too fast, and his skin felt clammy. "How's the headache?
-Did the Nucleocat treatment help?"
-
-"I feel worse, if anything."
-
-"Better set up beds," she told George. "Get everyone back into the
-clinic."
-
-"We're doing that," George assured her. "That's what Hal is doing."
-
-She went back to the laboratory. Max was pacing up and down, absently
-running his hands through his black hair until it stood straight up. He
-stopped when he saw her face, and scowled thoughtfully. "They are still
-sick?" It was more a statement than a question.
-
-She nodded.
-
-"The Cureall didn't cure this time," he muttered. "That leaves it up
-to us. We have melting sickness and according to Pat and the hamsters,
-that leaves us less than a day to find out what it is and learn how to
-stop it."
-
-Suddenly an idea for another test struck him and he moved to the work
-table to set it up. He worked rapidly, with an occasional uncoordinated
-movement betraying his usual efficiency.
-
-It was strange to see Max troubled and afraid.
-
-She put on a laboratory smock and began to work. She worked in
-silence. The mechanicals had failed. Hal and George Barton were busy
-staving off death from the weaker cases and trying to gain time for Max
-and her to work. The problem of the plague had to be solved by the two
-of them alone. It was in their hands.
-
-Another test, no results. Another test, no results. Max's hands were
-shaking and he stopped a moment to take stimulants.
-
-She went into the ward for a moment, found Bess and warned her quietly
-to tell the other women to be ready to take over if the men became too
-sick to go on. "But tell them calmly. We don't want to frighten the
-men." She lingered in the ward long enough to see the word spread among
-the women in a widening wave of paler faces and compressed lips; then
-she went back to the laboratory.
-
-Another test. There was no sign of a micro-organism in anyone's blood,
-merely a growing horde of leucocytes and phagocytes, prowling as if
-mobilized to repel invasion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Len Marlow was wheeled in unconscious, with Hal Barton's written
-comments and conclusions pinned to the blanket.
-
-"I don't feel so well myself," the assistant complained. "The air feels
-thick. I can't breathe."
-
-June saw that his lips were blue. "Oxygen short," she told Max.
-
-"Low red corpuscle count," Max answered. "Look into a drop and see
-what's going on. Use mine; I feel the same way he does." She took two
-drops of Max's blood. The count was low, falling too fast.
-
-Breathing is useless without the proper minimum of red corpuscles in
-the blood. People below that minimum die of asphyxiation although their
-lungs are full of pure air. The red corpuscle count was falling too
-fast. The time she and Max had to work in was too short.
-
-"Pump some more CO_{2} into the air system," Max said urgently over the
-phone. "Get some into the men's end of the ward."
-
- * * * * *
-
-She looked through the microscope at the live sample of blood. It was a
-dark clear field and bright moving things spun and swirled through it,
-but she could see nothing that did not belong there.
-
-"Hal," Max called over the general speaker system, "cut the other
-treatments, check for accelerating anemia. Treat it like monoxide
-poisoning--CO_{2} and oxygen."
-
-She reached into a cupboard under the work table, located two cylinders
-of oxygen, cracked the valves and handed one to Max and one to the
-assistant. Some of the bluish tint left the assistant's face as he
-breathed and he went over to the patient with reawakened concern.
-
-"Not breathing, Doc!"
-
-Max was working at the desk, muttering equations of hemoglobin
-catalysis.
-
-"Len's gone, Doc," the assistant said more loudly.
-
-"Artificial respiration and get him into a regeneration tank," said
-June, not moving from the microscope. "Hurry! Hal will show you how.
-The oxidation and mechanical heart action in the tank will keep him
-going. Put anyone in a tank who seems to be dying. Get some women to
-help you. Give them Hal's instructions."
-
-The tanks were ordinarily used to suspend animation in a nutrient bath
-during the regrowth of any diseased organ. It could preserve life in
-an almost totally destroyed body during the usual disintegration and
-regrowth treatments for cancer and old age, and it could encourage
-healing as destruction continued ... but they could not prevent
-ultimate death as long as the disease was not conquered.
-
-The drop of blood in June's microscope was a great, dark field, and in
-the foreground, brought to gargantuan solidity by the stereo effect,
-drifted neat saucer shapes of red blood cells. They turned end for end,
-floating by the humped misty mass of a leucocyte which was crawling on
-the cover glass. There were not enough red corpuscles, and she felt
-that they grew fewer as she watched.
-
-She fixed her eye on one, not blinking in fear that she would miss what
-might happen. It was a tidy red button, and it spun as it drifted, the
-current moving it aside in a curve as it passed by the leucocyte.
-
-Then, abruptly, the cell vanished.
-
-June stared numbly at the place where it had been.
-
-Behind her, Max was calling over the speaker system again: "Dr. Stark
-speaking. Any technician who knows anything about the life tanks, start
-bringing more out of storage and set them up. Emergency."
-
-"We may need forty-seven," June said quietly.
-
-"We may need forty-seven," Max repeated to the ship in general. His
-voice did not falter. "Set them up along the corridor. Hook them in on
-extension lines."
-
-His voice filtered back from the empty floors above in a series of dim
-echoes. What he had said meant that every man on board might be on the
-point of heart stoppage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-June looked blindly through the binocular microscope, trying to think.
-Out of the corner of her eyes she could see that Max was wavering and
-breathing more and more frequently of the pure, cold, burning oxygen of
-the cylinders. In the microscope she could see that there were fewer
-red cells left alive in the drop of his blood. The rate of fall was
-accelerating.
-
-She didn't have to glance at Max to know how he would look--skin pale,
-black eyebrows and keen brown eyes slightly squinted in thought, a
-faint ironical grin twisting the bluing lips. Intelligent, thin,
-sensitive, his face was part of her mind. It was inconceivable that
-Max could die. He couldn't die. He couldn't leave her alone.
-
-She forced her mind back to the problem. All the men of the _Explorer_
-were at the same point, wherever they were.
-
-Moving to Max's desk, she spoke into the intercom system: "Bess, send
-a couple of women to look through the ship, room by room, with a
-stretcher. Make sure all the men are down here." She remembered Reno.
-"Sparks, heard anything from Reno? Is he back?"
-
-Sparks replied weakly after a lag. "The last I heard from Reno was a
-call this morning. He was raving about mirrors, and Pat Mead's folks
-not being real people, just carbon copies, and claiming he was crazy;
-and I should send him the psychiatrist. I thought he was kidding. He
-didn't call back."
-
-"Thanks, Sparks." Reno was lost.
-
-Max dialed and spoke to the bridge over the phone. "Are you okay up
-there? Forget about engineering controls. Drop everything and head for
-the tanks while you can still walk."
-
-June went back to the work table and whispered into her own phone.
-"Bess, send up a stretcher for Max. He looks pretty bad."
-
-There had to be a solution. The life tanks could sustain life in a
-damaged body, encouraging it to regrow more rapidly, but they merely
-slowed death as long as the disease was not checked. The postponement
-could not last long, for destruction could go on steadily in the tanks
-until the nutritive solution would hold no life except the triumphant
-microscopic killers that caused melting sickness.
-
-There were very few red blood corpuscles in the microscope field now,
-incredibly few. She tipped the microscope and they began to drift,
-spinning slowly. A lone corpuscle floated through the center. She
-watched it as the current swept it in an arc past the dim off-focus
-bulk of the leucocyte. There was a sweep of motion and it vanished.
-
-For a moment it meant nothing to her; then she lifted her head from
-the microscope and looked around. Max sat at his desk, head in hand,
-his rumpled short black hair sticking out between his fingers at odd
-angles. A pencil and a pad scrawled with formulas lay on the desk
-before him. She could see his concentration in the rigid set of his
-shoulders. He was still thinking; he had not given up.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Max, I just saw a leucocyte grab a red blood corpuscle. It was
-unbelievably fast."
-
-"Leukemia," muttered Max without moving. "Galloping leukemia yet! That
-comes under the heading of cancer. Well, that's part of the answer. It
-might be all we need." He grinned feebly and reached for the speaker
-set. "Anybody still on his feet in there?" he muttered into it, and
-the question was amplified to a booming voice throughout the ship.
-"Hal, are you still going? Look, Hal, change all the dials, change the
-dials, set them to deep melt and regeneration. One week. This is like
-leukemia. Got it? This is like leukemia."
-
-June rose. It was time for her to take over the job. She leaned across
-his desk and spoke into the speaker system. "Doctor Walton talking,"
-she said. "This is to the women. Don't let any of the men work any
-more; they'll kill themselves. See that they all go into the tanks
-right away. Set the tank dials for deep regeneration. You can see how
-from the ones that are set."
-
-Two exhausted and frightened women clattered in the doorway with a
-stretcher. Their hands were scratched and oily from helping to set up
-tanks.
-
-"That order includes you," she told Max sternly and caught him as he
-swayed.
-
-Max saw the stretcher bearers and struggled upright. "Ten more
-minutes," he said clearly. "Might think of an idea. Something not right
-in this setup. I have to figure how to prevent a relapse, how the thing
-started."
-
-He knew more bacteriology than she did; she had to help him think. She
-motioned the bearers to wait, fixed a breathing mask for Max from a
-cylinder of CO_{2} and the opened one of oxygen. Max went back to his
-desk.
-
-She walked up and down, trying to think, remembering the hamsters. The
-melting sickness, it was called. Melting. She struggled with an impulse
-to open a tank which held one of the men. She wanted to look in, see if
-that would explain the name.
-
-Melting Sickness....
-
-Footsteps came and Pat Mead stood uncertainly in the doorway. Tall,
-handsome, rugged, a pioneer. "Anything I can do?" he asked.
-
-She barely looked at him. "You can stay out of our way. We're busy."
-
-"I'd like to help," he said.
-
-"Very funny." She was vicious, enjoying the whip of her words. "Every
-man is dying because you're a carrier, and you want to help."
-
- * * * * *
-
-He stood nervously clenching and unclenching his hands. "A guinea pig,
-maybe. I'm immune. All the Meads are."
-
-"Go away." God, why couldn't she think? What makes a Mead immune?
-
-"Aw, let 'im alone," Max muttered. "Pat hasn't done anything." He went
-waveringly to the microscope, took a tiny sliver from his finger,
-suspended it in a slide and slipped it under the lens with detached
-habitual dexterity. "Something funny going on," he said to June.
-"Symptoms don't feel right."
-
-After a moment he straightened and motioned for her to look.
-"Leucocytes, phagocytes--" He was bewildered. "My own--"
-
-She looked in, and then looked back at Pat in a growing wave of
-horror. "They're not your own, Max!" she whispered.
-
-Max rested a hand on the table to brace himself, put his eye to the
-microscope, and looked again. June knew what he saw. Phagocytes,
-leucocytes, attacking and devouring his tissues in a growing incredible
-horde, multiplying insanely.
-
-_Not his phagocytes! Pat Mead's!_ The Meads' evolved cells had learned
-too much. They were contagious. And not Pat Mead's.... How much alike
-_were_ the Meads?... Mead cells contagious from one to another, not
-a disease attacking or being fought, but acting as normal leucocytes
-in whatever body they were in! The leucocytes of tall, red-headed
-people, finding no strangeness in the bloodstream of any of the tall,
-red-headed people. No strangeness.... A toti-potent leucocyte finding
-its way into cellular wombs.
-
-The womblike life tanks. For the men of the _Explorer_, a week's cure
-with deep melting to de-differentiate the leucocytes and turn them back
-to normal tissue, then regrowth and reforming from the cells that were
-there. From the cells that _were_ there. _From the cells that were
-there...._
-
-"Pat--"
-
-"I know." Pat began to laugh, his face twisted with sudden
-understanding. "I understand. I get it. I'm a contagious personality.
-That's funny, isn't it?"
-
-Max rose suddenly from the microscope and lurched toward him, fists
-clenched. Pat caught him as he fell, and the bewildered stretcher
-bearers carried him out to the tanks.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a week June tended the tanks. The other women volunteered to help,
-but she refused. She said nothing, hoping her guess would not be true.
-
-"Is everything all right?" Elsie asked her anxiously. "How is Jerry
-coming along?" Elsie looked haggard and worn, like all the women, from
-doing the work that the men had always done.
-
-"He's fine," June said tonelessly, shutting tight the door of the tank
-room. "They're all fine."
-
-"That's good," Elsie said, but she looked more frightened than before.
-
-June firmly locked the tank room door and the girl went away.
-
-The other women had been listening, and now they wandered back to
-their jobs, unsatisfied by June's answer, but not daring to ask for
-the actual truth. They were there whenever June went into the tank
-room, and they were still there--or relieved by others; June was
-not sure--when she came out. And always some one of them asked the
-unvarying question for all the others, and June gave the unvarying
-answer. But she kept the key. No woman but herself knew what was going
-on in the life tanks.
-
-Then the day of completion came. June told no one of the hour. She
-went into the room as on the other days, locked the door behind her,
-and there was the nightmare again. This time it was reality and she
-wandered down a path between long rows of coffinlike tanks, calling,
-"Max! Max!" silently and looking into each one as it opened.
-
-But each face she looked at was the same. Watching them dissolve and
-regrow in the nutrient solution, she had only been able to guess at the
-horror of what was happening. Now she knew.
-
-They were all the same lean-boned, blond-skinned face, with a
-pin-feather growth of reddish down on cheeks and scalp. All
-horribly--and handsomely--the same.
-
-A medical kit lay carelessly on the floor beside Max's tank. She stood
-near the bag. "Max," she said, and found her throat closing. The canned
-voice of the mechanical mocked her, speaking glibly about waking and
-sitting up. "I'm sorry, Max...."
-
-The tall man with rugged features and bright blue eyes sat up sleepily
-and lifted an eyebrow at her, and ran his hand over his red-fuzzed head
-in a gesture of bewilderment.
-
-"What's the matter, June?" he asked drowsily.
-
-She gripped his arm. "Max--"
-
-He compared the relative size of his arm with her hand and said
-wonderingly, "You shrank."
-
-"I know, Max. I know."
-
-He turned his head and looked at his arms and legs, pale blond arms
-and legs with a down of red hair. He touched the thick left arm,
-squeezed a pinch of hard flesh. "It isn't mine," he said, surprised.
-"But I can feel it."
-
-Watching his face was like watching a stranger mimicking and distorting
-Max's expressions. Max in fear. Max trying to understand what had
-happened to him, looking around at the other men sitting up in their
-tanks. Max feeling the terror that was in herself and all the men as
-they stared at themselves and their friends and saw what they had
-become.
-
-"We're all Pat Mead," he said harshly. "All the Meads are Pat Mead.
-That's why he was surprised to see people who didn't look like himself."
-
-"Yes, Max."
-
-"Max," he repeated. "It's me, all right. The nervous system didn't
-change." His new blue eyes held hers. "My love didn't, either. Did
-yours? Did it, June?"
-
-"No, Max." But she couldn't know yet. She had loved Max with the thin,
-ironic face, the rumpled black hair and the twisted smile that never
-really hid his quick sympathy. Now he was Pat Mead. Could he also be
-Max? "Of course I still love you, darling."
-
-He grinned. It was still the wry smile of Max, though fitting strangely
-on the handsome new blond face. "Then it isn't so bad. It might even be
-pretty good. I envied him this big, muscular body. If Pat or any of
-these Meads so much as looks at you, I'm going to knock his block off.
-Understand?"
-
- * * * * *
-
-She laughed and couldn't stop. It wasn't that funny. But it was still
-Max, trying to be unafraid, drawing on humor. Maybe the rest of the men
-would also be their old selves, enough so the women would not feel that
-their men were strangers.
-
-Behind her, male voices spoke characteristically. She did not have
-to turn to know which was which: "This is one way to keep a guy from
-stealing your girl," that was Len Marlow; "I've got to write down all
-my reactions," Hal Barton; "Now I can really work that hillside vein of
-metal," St. Clair. Then others complaining, swearing, laughing bitterly
-at the trick that had been played on them and their flirting, tempted
-women. She knew who they were. Their women would know them apart, too.
-
-"We'll go outside," Max said. "You and I. Maybe the shock won't be so
-bad to the women after they see me." He paused. "You didn't tell them,
-did you?"
-
-"I couldn't. I wasn't sure. I--was hoping I was wrong."
-
-She opened the door and closed it quickly. There was a small crowd on
-the other side.
-
-"Hello, Pat," Elsie said uncertainly, trying to look past them into the
-tank room before the door shut.
-
-"I'm not Pat, I'm Max," said the tall man with the blue eyes and the
-fuzz-reddened skull. "Listen--"
-
-"Good heavens, Pat, what happened to your hair?" Shelia asked.
-
-"I'm Max," insisted the man with the handsome face and the sharp blue
-eyes. "Don't you get it? I'm Max Stark. The melting sickness is Mead
-cells. We caught them from Pat. They adapted us to Minos. They also
-changed us all into Pat Mead."
-
-The women stared at him, at each other. They shook their heads.
-
-"They don't understand," June said. "I couldn't have if I hadn't seen
-it happening, Max."
-
-"It's Pat," said Shelia, dazedly stubborn. "He shaved off his hair.
-It's some kind of joke."
-
-Max shook her shoulders, glaring down at her face. "I'm Max. Max Stark.
-They all look like me. Do you hear? It's funny, but it's not a joke.
-Laugh for us, for God's sake!"
-
-"It's too much," said June. "They'll have to see."
-
-She opened the door and let them in. They hurried past her to the
-tanks, looking at forty-six identical blond faces, beginning to call in
-frightened voices:
-
-"Jerry!"
-
-"Harry!"
-
-"Lee, where are you, sweetheart--"
-
-June shut the door on the voices that were growing hysterical, the
-women terrified and helpless, the men shouting to let the women know
-who they were.
-
-"It isn't easy," said Max, looking down at his own thick muscles. "But
-you aren't changed and the other girls aren't. That helps."
-
-Through the muffled noise and hysteria, a bell was ringing.
-
-"It's the airlock," June said.
-
-Peering in the viewplate were nine Meads from Alexandria. To all
-appearances, eight of them were Pat Mead at various ages, from fifteen
-to fifty, and the other was a handsome, leggy, red-headed girl who
-could have been his sister.
-
-Regretfully, they explained through the voice tube that they had walked
-over from Alexandria to bring news that the plane pilot had contracted
-melting sickness there and had died.
-
-They wanted to come in.
-
- * * * * *
-
-June and Max told them to wait and returned to the tank room. The
-men were enjoying their new height and strength, and the women were
-bewilderedly learning that they could tell one Pat Mead from another,
-by voice, by gesture of face or hand. The panic was gone. In its place
-was a dull acceptance of the fantastic situation.
-
-Max called for attention. "There are nine Meads outside who want to
-come in. They have different names, but they're all Pat Mead."
-
-They frowned or looked blank, and George Barton asked, "Why didn't you
-let them in? I don't see any problem."
-
-"One of them," said Max soberly, "is a girl. _Patricia_ Mead. The girl
-wants to come in."
-
-There was a long silence while the implication settled to the fear
-center of the women's minds. Shelia the beautiful felt it first. She
-cried, "No! Please don't let her in!" There was real fright in her tone
-and the women caught it quickly.
-
-Elsie clung to Jerry, begging, "You don't want me to change, do you,
-Jerry? You like me the way I am! Tell me you do!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-The other girls backed away. It was illogical, but it was human. June
-felt terror rising in herself. She held up her hand for quiet, and
-presented the necessity to the group.
-
-"Only half of us can leave Minos," she said. "The men cannot eat
-ship food; they've been conditioned to this planet. We women can go,
-but we would have to go without our men. We can't go outside without
-contagion, and we can't spend the rest of our lives in quarantine
-inside the ship. George Barton is right--there is no problem."
-
-"But we'd be changed!" Shelia shrilled. "I don't want to become a Mead!
-I don't want to be somebody else!"
-
-She ran to the inner wall of the corridor. There was a brief
-hesitation, and then, one by one, the women fled to that side, until
-there were only Bess, June and four others left.
-
-"See!" cried Shelia. "A vote! We can't let the girl in!"
-
-No one spoke. To change, to be someone else--the idea was strange
-and horrifying. The men stood uneasily glancing at each other, as if
-looking into mirrors, and against the wall of the corridor the women
-watched in fear and huddled together, staring at the men. One man in
-forty-seven poses. One of them made a beseeching move toward Elsie and
-she shrank away.
-
-"No, Jerry! I won't let you change me!"
-
-Max stirred restlessly, the ironic smile that made his new face his own
-unconsciously twisting into a grimace of pity. "We men can't leave, and
-you women can't stay," he said bluntly. "Why not let Patricia Mead in.
-Get it over with!"
-
-June took a small mirror from her belt pouch and studied her own face,
-aware of Max talking forcefully, the men standing silent, the women
-pleading. Her face ... her own face with its dark blue eyes, small
-nose, long mobile lips ... the mind and the body are inseparable; the
-shape of a face is part of the mind. She put the mirror back.
-
-"I'd kill myself!" Shelia was sobbing. "I'd rather die!"
-
-"You won't die," Max was saying. "Can't you see there's only one
-solution--"
-
-They were looking at Max. June stepped silently out of the tank room,
-and then turned and went to the airlock. She opened the valves that
-would let in Pat Mead's sister.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Contagion, by Katherine MacLean
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