Address: Centauri
Copyright© 2017 by F.L. Wallace
Chapter 1
Light flickered. It was uncomfortably bright.
Doctor Cameron gazed intently at the top of the desk. It wasn’t easy to be diplomatic. “The request was turned over to the Medicouncil,” he said. “I assure you it was studied thoroughly before it was reported back to the Solar Committee.”
Docchi edged forward, his face alight with anticipation.
The doctor kept his eyes averted. The man was damnably disconcerting--had no right to be alive. In the depths of the sea there were certain creatures like him and on a warm summer evening there was still another parallel, but never any human with such an infirmity. “I’m afraid you know what the answer is. A flat no for the present.”
Docchi sagged and his arms hung limp. “That’s the answer?”
“It’s not as hopeless as you think. Decisions can be changed. It won’t be the first time.”
“Sure,” said Docchi. “We’ll wait and wait until it’s finally changed. We’ve got centuries, haven’t we?” His face was blazing. It had slipped out of control though he wasn’t aware of it. Beneath the skin certain cells had been modified, there were substances in his body that the ordinary individual didn’t have. And when there was an extreme flow of nervous energy the response was--light. His metabolism was akin to that of a firefly.
Cameron meddled with buttons. It was impossible to keep the lighting at a decent level. Docchi was a nuisance.
“Why?” questioned Docchi. “We’re capable, you know that. How could they refuse?”
That was something he didn’t want asked because there was no answer both of them would accept. Sometimes a blunt reply was the best evasion. “Do you think they’d take you? Or Nona, Jordan, or Anti?”
Docchi winced, his arms quivering uselessly. “Maybe not. But we told you we’re willing to let experts decide. There’s nearly a thousand of us. They should be able to get one qualified crew.”
“Perhaps. I’m not going to say.” Cameron abandoned the light as beyond his control. “Most of you are biocompensators. I concede it’s a factor in your favor. But you must realize there are many things against you.” He squinted at the desk top. Below the solid surface there was a drawer and in the drawer there was--that was what he was trying to see or determine. The more he looked the less clear anything seemed to be. He tried to make his voice crisp and professional. “You’re wasting time discussing this with me. I’ve merely passed the decision on. I’m not responsible for it and I can’t do anything for you.”
Docchi stood up, his face colorless and bright. But the inner illumination was no indication of hope.
Doctor Cameron looked at him directly for the first time. It wasn’t as bad as he expected. “I suggest you calm down. Be patient and wait. You’ll be surprised how often you get what you want.”
“You’d be surprised how we get what we want,” said Docchi. He turned away, lurching toward the door which opened automatically and closed behind him.
Again Cameron concentrated on the desk, trying to look through it. He wrote down the sequence he expected to find, lingering over it to make sure he didn’t force the pictures that came into his mind. He opened the drawer and compared the Rhine cards with what he’d written, frowning in disappointment. No matter how he tried he never got better than average results. Perhaps there was something to telepathy but he’d never found it. Anyway it was clear he wasn’t one of the gifted few.
He shut the drawer. It was a private game, a method to keep from becoming involved in Docchi’s problems, to avoid emotional entanglement with people he had nothing in common with. He didn’t enjoy depriving weak and helpless men and women of what little hope they had. It was their lack of strength that made them so difficult to handle.
He reached for the telecom. “Get Medicouncilor Thorton,” he told the operator. “Direct if you can; indirect if you have to. I’ll hold on.”
Approximate mean diameter thirty miles, the asteroid was listed on the charts as Handicap Haven with a mark that indicated except in emergency no one not authorized was to land there. Those who were confined to it were willing to admit they were handicapped but they didn’t call it haven. They used other terms, none suggesting sanctuary.
It was a hospital, of course, but even more it was a convalescent home--the permanent kind. Healthy and vigorous humanity had reserved the remote planetoid, a whirling bleak rock of no other value, and built large installations there for less fortunate people. It was a noble gesture but like many gestures the reality fell short of the intentions. And not many people outside the Haven itself realized wherein it was a failure.
The robot operator broke into his thoughts. “Medicouncilor Thorton has been located.”
An older man looked out of the screen, competent, forceful. “I’m on my way to the satellites of Jupiter. I’ll be in direct range for the next half hour.” At such distances transmission and reception were practically instantaneous. Cameron was assured of uninterrupted conversation. “It’s a good thing you called. Have you got the Solar Committee reply?”
“This morning. I saw no reason to hold it up. I just finished giving Docchi the news.”
“Dispatch. I like that. Get the disagreeable job done with.” The medicouncilor searched through the desk in front of him without success. “Never mind. I’ll find the information later. Now. How did Docchi react?”
“He didn’t like it. He was mad clear through.”
“That speaks well for his bounce.”
“They all have spirit. Nothing to use it on,” said Dr. Cameron. “I confess I didn’t look at him often though he was quite presentable, even handsome in a startling sort of way.”
Thorton nodded brusquely. “Presentable. Does that mean he had arms?”
“Today he did. Is it important?”
“I think so. He expected a favorable reply and wanted to look his best, as nearly normal as possible. In view of that I’m surprised he didn’t threaten you.”
Cameron tried to recall the incident. “I think he did, mildly. He said something to the effect that I’d be surprised how they got what they wanted.”
“So you anticipate trouble. That’s why you called?”
“I don’t know. I want your opinion.”
“You’re on the scene, doctor. You get the important nuances,” said the medicouncilor hastily. “However it’s my considered judgment they won’t start anything immediately. It takes time to get over the shock of refusal. They can’t do anything. Individually they’re helpless and collectively there aren’t parts for a dozen sound bodies on the asteroid.”
“I’ll have to agree,” said Dr. Cameron. “But there’s something that bothers me. I’ve looked over the records. No accidental has ever liked being here, and that covers quite a few years.”
“Nobody appreciates the hospital until he’s sick, doctor.”
“I know. That’s partly what’s wrong. They’re no longer ill and yet they have to stay here. What worries me is that there’s never been such open discontent as now.”
“I hope I don’t have to point out that someone’s stirring them up. Find out who and keep a close watch. As a doctor you can find pretexts, a different diet, a series of tests. You can keep the person coming to you every day.”
“I’ve found out. There’s a self-elected group of four, Docchi, Nona, Anti and Jordan. I believe they’re supposed to be the local recreation committee.”
The medicouncilor smiled. “An apt camouflage. It keeps them amused.”
“I thought so too but now I’m convinced they’re no longer harmless. I’d like permission to break up the group. Humanely of course.”
“I always welcome new ideas.”
In spite of what he’d said the medicouncilor probably did have an open mind. “Start with those it’s possible to do the most with. Docchi, for instance. With prosthetic arms, he appears normal except for that uncanny fluorescence. Granted that the last is repulsive to the average person. We can’t correct the condition medically but we can make it into an asset.”
“An asset? Very neat, if it can be done.” The medicouncilor’s expression said it couldn’t be.
“Gland opera,” said Cameron, hurrying on. “The most popular program in the solar system, telepaths, teleports, pyrotics and so forth the heroes. Fake of course, makeup and trick camera shots.
“But Docchi can be made into a real star. The death-ray man, say. When his face shines men fall dead or paralyzed. He’d have a tremendous following of kids.”
“Children,” mused the medicouncilor. “Are you serious about exposing them to his influence? Do you really want them to see him?”
“He’d have a chance to return to society in a way that would be acceptable to him,” said Cameron defensively. He shouldn’t have specifically mentioned kids.
“To him, perhaps,” reflected the medicouncilor. “It’s an ingenious idea, doctor, one which does credit to your humanitarianism. But I’m afraid of the public’s reception. Have you gone into Docchi’s medical history?”
“I glanced at it before I called him in.” The man was unusual, even in a place that specialized in the abnormal. Docchi had been an electrochemical engineer with a degree in cold lighting. On his way to a brilliant career, he had been the victim of a particularly messy accident. The details hadn’t been described but Cameron could supplement them with his imagination. He’d been badly mangled and tossed into a tank of the basic cold lighting fluid.
There was life left in the body; it flickered but never went entirely out. His arms were gone and his ribs were crushed into his spinal column. Regeneration wasn’t easy; a partial rib cage could be built up, but no more than that. He had no shoulder muscles and only a minimum in his back and now, much later, that was why he tired easily and why the prosthetic arms with which he’d been fitted were merely ornamental, there was nothing which could move them.
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