The Galactic Gourmet

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The Galactic Gourmet Page 15

by James White


  Danalta's physiological classification was TOBS. It belonged to a species that had evolved on a planet with a highly eccentric orbit which produced climatic changes so violent that an incredible de­gree of physical adaptability was necessary for survival. The species had become dominant on its world and developed intelligence and a civilization, not by competing in the evolution of natural weapons but by refining and perfecting their adaptive capability. When faced by natural enemies or life-threatening events they had the four op­tions of flight, protective mimicry, the assumption of a shape fright­ening to the attacker, or encasing themselves in a dense, hard shell. The species was basically amoebic but with the ability to extrude any limbs, sense organs or protective tegument necessary to any en­vironment or situation in which it might find itself.

  "...In pre-sapient times the speed and accuracy of the mim­icry was all-important," Danalta went on, and without a pause in its conversation it took the shape of a scaled-down Tralthan who was a perfect miniature of Gurronsevas himself, then more life-sized replicas of Naydrad and Murchison. "To avert a threat by natural predators, rapid reproduction of the would-be attacker's actions and behavior patterns were an important part of the process. This meant that we also had to develop the faculty of receptive empathy so that we could know how the other being expected us to look and act although, needless to say, it lacks the range and sensitivity of Doctor Prilicla's empathic faculty.

  "With such physical and psychological protection available," it continued, "our species has become impervious to bodily dam­age other than by physical annihilation or the application of ultra-high temperatures, which are threats posed by modern technology rather than natural enemies. While we have no trouble mimicking an infant in every detail we still, regrettably, die of old age."

  "Fascinating," said Gurronsevas. "But surely, with this natural protection available, your species has no great need for doctors?"

  "You are right," Danalta replied, "there is no need for the healing arts on my world, and I am not a doctor. But to a mimic of my capabilities, and at this point I must say that they are consid­ered much greater than average among my people, an establishment like Sector General represents a tremendous challenge. Because of the work I am able to do on Rhabwar and among the ward patients, my friends insist on giving me that title.

  "Do you have another question, Chief Dietitian?"

  Gurronsevas felt himself warming towards this utterly strange being who, like himself, had come here solely because of the pro­fessional challenge.

  While he was still trying to frame his simple question, which to a species as weird as Danalta's might give offense in a politely roundabout fashion, he felt a sudden dizziness. Rhabwar had reached Jump distance and entered hyperspace, a fact confirmed by the direct vision ports which were showing only a flickering greyness.

  Prilicla said gently, "Gurronsevas, your hesitancy suggests that the question you wish to ask may be an indelicate one dealing, per­haps, with the subject of reproduction? Please remember that Danalta is a receptive empath, as am I. We are not telepaths. We feel that you have another question. We do not know what it is, only that you feel the answer to be important."

  "Yes, it is important to me," Gurronsevas admitted, then went on, "Doctor Danalta, what do you eat?"

  Pathologist Murchison leaned its head back and laughed, Charge Nurse Naydrad's silvery fur was rolling in slow, uneven waves from nose to tail, and Prilicla's body was reacting to what Gurronsevas now knew to be a sudden burst of pleasant emotional radiation. Only Danalta's body was still and its words serious.

  "I am afraid that I will prove a grave disappointment to you, Chief Dietitian," it said, "because my species does not possess the sense of taste. Apart from the ultra-hard metals, I can and do eat anything and everything regardless of consistency or appearance. In moments of deep mental concentration I have been known to dissolve a hole in the deck plating on which I am resting, and in the past this has caused great annoyance to the ship's officers."

  "I know the feeling well," said Gurronsevas.

  While the others were displaying amusement in their varying fashions, he was remembering Lioren's final words to him. Gur­ronsevas was on probation, the Padre had warned him, and there were things he must try to do and not to do. Obviously he must make no attempt to tinker with the ship's food synthesizer. Above all, he must remember that he was on a small ship carrying a very small crew of specialists, and he must try very hard to make friends rather than enemies of them. Since the medical team had come aboard he had been trying to do that, by negating his own impor­tance and displaying a friendly and admiring curiosity about Danalta and, in time, the others. Surprisingly, it had not required a great effort on his part, but now he was wondering whether he had overdone the uncharacteristic charm and they secretly thought of him as being shallow and insincere, or was it simply that they were trying as hard to be friendly as he was. He was also wonder­ing if he would have as much success making friends with Rhabwar's non-medical officers.

  As if on thought-cue the internal comm screen lit up to show the Monitor-green-uniformed head and shoulders of an Earth-human.

  "Casualty Deck, this is the Captain," it said sharply. "I over­heard your last few minutes' conversation. Doctor Prilicla, what is that, that walking Tralthan disaster area doing on my ship?"

  Even though Control was at long range for the Cinrusskin's empathic faculty, the Captain's emotional radiation was causing the empath some minor distress. Without hesitation Prilicla said, "For the period of the present mission, friend Gurronsevas has been co-opted to the medical team as a non-clinical advisor. Its expertise could prove helpful in what lies ahead. Please do not be concerned about possible effects on the structure of the ship, friend Fletcher. The Chief Dietitian will be accommodated on the casualty deck, it requires no special life-support and it will not risk damaging your light-gravity furniture and equipment by going forward, unless at your express invitation."

  There was a moment's silence, but Gurronsevas was too star­tled and confused by Prilicla's words, to be able to fill it with a ques­tion.

  He had often heard it said that the little empath was not averse to bending the truth, a fact which Prilicla itself freely admitted, if by so doing it could improve the quality of emotional radiation in the area. An emotion-sensitive felt everything that those around it were feeling with the same degree of intensity, but the suggestion that Gurronsevas could advise Rhabwar's medical team on anything during the forthcoming mission was utterly ridiculous. Doubtless the lie would improve the Captain's emotional radiation, Gurron­sevas thought, but the effect would be temporary.

  "I feel your curiosity, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla, no longer trembling as the Captain's anger diminished to irritation, "and I in­tend to satisfy it as soon as possible."

  "Very well, Doctor," said the Captain, then went on briskly, "We are presently in hyperspace cruising mode, estimating the Wemar system in just under four standard days and the ship is run­ning itself. A few minutes before boarding I was given the coordi­nates of the target system and the preliminary briefing tape, which there has been no opportunity to scan, and told that we would be fully briefed on arrival. Now would be a convenient time to run the tape so that we non-medics can be let into the secret of what we are supposed to be doing there."

  "I don't know anything about it, either," said Naydrad, its fur spiking in irritation. "At least, nothing but a rumor that three weeks of top-level discussions were needed to decide whether or not Rhab­war could do the job. And when they did finally make up their minds, they keyed my alarm for a full emergency turn-out when I was right in the middle of..."

  "Friend Naydrad," Prilicla broke in gently, "it is often the case that the time taken to reach a decision has to be deducted from that needed to carry it out. The rumor was not entirely accurate. I took part in those discussions but, in spite of our unrivaled reputation for pulling sick or damaged life-forms out of trouble, I was not sure that Rhabwar is
capable of performing this mission. Many of the hospital's military and medical authorities agreed with me; the Chief Psychologist and a few others did not. The only reason for the secrecy was to avoid hurting the feelings of Rhabwar's crew by publicly displaying their lack of confidence in us.

  "And the questions that I feel you all wanting so badly to ask," it went on, "should wait until we have viewed the Wemar material.

  "When you are ready, friend Fletcher."

  Chapter 18

  At the time of its discovery three months earlier, it was not thought that the world, which its dominant intelligent species called Wemar, would cause the cultural-contact specialists of the Monitor Corps any serious problems. It was an environmentally distressed world with subsistence level living standards for the tiny remnant of its surviving population that verged on uninhabitability. In its recent history—from the orbital studies of industrial archeological remains the date was estimated at a little over four centuries earlier—the native culture had been technologically ad­vanced to the level of maintaining orbiting space satellites, and there were traces of a non-permanent base on the system's closest and uninhabitable planet.

  Because of their background of recently lost space technology, two important assumptions had been made. One was that the Wem would not be frightened by the idea of a galaxy inhabited by other intelligent beings and, even though they might be surprised and un­easy at the sudden arrival of a starship in orbit around their world, they would not be completely against the idea of making friendly contact with other-species visitors. The second assumption was that when contact had been widened and their natural fears allayed, they would agree to accept the offers of material and techni­cal support which they so desperately needed.

  Both assumptions proved wrong. When two-way translation-communication devices were soft-landed in the few inhabited areas—sound and vision communications were a part of their lost technology—the natives exchanged only a few angry words before ordering the strangers to leave Wemar and its system before smash­ing all of the off-world devices. Evidently they had grown to fear all forms of technology as well as the people who used it. Only one small, isolated group had shown some trace of reluctance at breaking off contact but they, too, destroyed the translator-communicators that had been sent to them.

  Plainly the Wem were a proud species who would not accept the kind of help that the off-worlders were so anxious to give them.

  Rather than risk the situation degenerating further, the com­manding officer of the orbiting Monitor preliminary contact ship obeyed the first order by ceasing to send down any more commu­nication devices, and ignored the second, safe in the knowledge that the planet-bound Wem could do nothing against the orbiting ves­sel which continued its close observation of the surface. Shortly af­terwards, Wemar had been declared a disaster area, and Rhabwar had been sent to assess the medical problems and, if possible, sug­gest a solution.

  It had never been the Federation's policy to do nothing while another intelligent species tried to commit suicide.

  Rhabwar emerged from hyperspace some ten planetary diameters from Wemar. From that distance it appeared to be like any other normal, life-bearing world, with wisps and blankets of cloud and the fat, white spirals of cyclonic weather systems softening and breaking up its continental outlines and polar ice fields. It was only when they had closed to within one diameter that the abnormal de­tails became plain.

  In spite of the generous scattering of rain-bearing clouds, it was only in a narrow band around the equator that the surface veg­etation showed any traces of normal growth. Above and below the green belt and into the north and south temperate zones the col­oration became increasingly tinged with yellow and brown until it merged into the tundra fringing the polar ice-fields. There were no large tracts of desert visible on those areas, it was simply that the once-thick forests and rolling grasslands of the past had withered and died or burned in what must have been great country-sized conflagrations due to naturally occurring lightning strikes, and the new growth was still fighting its way through the ashes of the old.

  They were still watching but not enjoying the view when the casualty deck's communicator lit with the image of the Captain.

  "Doctor Prilicla," said Fletcher, "we have a signal from Cap­tain Williamson on Tremaar. He says that it is operationally un­necessary for Rhabwar to dock with his ship, but he would like to speak with you at once."

  The commanding officer of a Monitor Corps survey and pre­liminary contact vessel would hold a lot more rank than the Cap­tain of an ambulance ship, Gurronsevas thought, and clearly this one intended to use it.

  "Senior Physician Prilicla," Williamson said without pream­ble, "I have no wish to give personal offense, but I am not pleased to see you here. The reason is that I am not happy with a mission philosophy based on near desperation and the assumption that if your presence here does not do any harm then it might do some good. From your briefing you already know that the situation here has gone sour and there are no signs of it improving. We are main­taining constant visual and surface sensor surveillance, but we have no direct communication with anyone on the surface. There is one small group of Wem who may be less proud and stubborn, or sim­ply more intelligent than the others, who gave the impression that a few of their number thought they might be able to benefit from our offers of help. But they, too, stopped speaking to us and smashed our translators. Personally, I believe there is still a possibility that, provided we do nothing further to offend them, this group might resume contact and, if it is handled carefully, enable us to reopen communications with the other, less amenable groups who in time will accept the large-scale disaster relief they need so badly."

  Williamson took a deep breath and went on, "Regardless of your good intentions, Rhabwar blundering uninvited into this sit­uation could end this tenuous future hope. And if you were to set down in an equatorial region, where the political power and the re­mains of their offensive technology are concentrated, it could also result in damage to your ship and casualties among your person­nel. The efforts of a small medical team are not going to significantly affect the situation here, except possibly for the worse..."

  While the other Captain was speaking, Gurronsevas studied its manner and minor changes of facial expression. It was an Earth-human who in many ways resembled Chief Psychologist O'Mara. The hairy crescents above the eyes and the head fur showing below the uniform cap were an identical shade of metallic grey, the eyes never looked away nor did they blink, and its words carried the self-assurance that went with the habit of command. In manner, how­ever, Williamson was much more polite than O'Mara.

  The preliminary briefing had suggested that the medical team could expect some arguments from the authorities on-site, Gur­ronsevas thought worriedly, but this sounded like a very serious dif­ference of opinion indeed. He wondered what a shy and timid emotion-sensitive like Prilicla could do against such strong oppo­sition.

  "...Regrettably," Williamson continued, "I cannot order you back to Sector General because, theoretically, you have operational authority at the scene of any disaster, and this could quickly become a disaster on the largest scale. But the Wem are a proud race with a degenerating culture which, as often happens in situations like this, still retains much of its weapons technology. We do not want to risk another Cromsaggar Incident here. For the safety of your crew and to avoid the physical and non-physical trauma that a fail­ure with casualties would bring to any empathic entity who was responsible, I would strongly advise you to return to Sector General without delay.

  "Please give my advice serious consideration, Senior Physician Prilicla," it ended, "and let me know your intentions as soon as pos­sible."

  Prilicla was maintaining a stable hover in front of the com­municator's vision pick-up and giving no indication of being in­timidated, Gurronsevas saw, or perhaps it had only one form of re­sponse to another thinking being regardless of the other's high rank or bad manners. It said, "Capt
ain, I am grateful for your concern over the safety of my crew, and for your understanding of the emo­tional distress I personally would suffer in the event of them sus­taining injuries. Knowing this, you must also know that I belong to the most physically fragile, timid and abjectly cowardly species in the Federation, the members of which will go to great extremes to avoid physical pain or emotional discomfort for ourselves or those around us which, for an empath, is the same thing. Friend Williamson, it is a law of nature, an evolutionary imperative, that I take no unnecessary risks."

  Williamson gave an impatient shake of its head and said, "You are the senior medical officer on Rhabwar, the ambulance ship that has more high-risk rescue missions to its credit than any other vessel in the Monitor Corps. You may argue that at the time those risks were necessary and unavoidable, even by a being to whom cowardice is a way of life. But with respect, Senior Physician, the risks you would take on Wemar are unnecessary, avoidable and stupid."

  Prilicla showed no physical reaction to the other's harsh words and, Gurronsevas realized suddenly, the reason must be that Tremaar was orbiting many thousands of miles away and far too distant for even an empath of Prilicla's hyper-sensitivity to detect Williamson's emotional radiation. Gently, it said, "My immediate intention is to assess for myself the situation in the north temper­ate zone, where the technology level and living conditions are prim­itive and, hopefully, the Wem minds are more flexible, before deciding whether or not to land and/or subsequently abort the mis­sion."

  Captain Williamson exhaled audibly but did not speak.

  "If or when we land," Prilicla went on, "I would be grateful if you would maintain orbital surveillance of the area so as to warn us of any hostile action that the Equatorials might be mounting against us. Rhabwar's meteor shield will protect the ship against anything the Wem can throw at us, but I have no intention of start­ing a war, even a defensive war, and will lift off and go elsewhere before that can happen. I would also be pleased to have any new information not contained in our preliminary briefing. I would appreciate having that information as soon as is convenient.

 

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