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The Galactic Gourmet

Page 25

by James White


  The hillside was steep and rocky, with more sharp-edged stones carpeting the dried-up river bed at its base. There were only a few clumps of vegetation, not very securely rooted, to give a steadying grip for their hands, and the crumbling, uneven ledge leading up to the cave would bear a twasach's weight but was barely wide enough to support one Wem at a time. She followed Creethar along the narrow ledge to the cave mouth and there, clinging pre­cariously to the slope, and with their heavy tails hanging over the ledge and threatening to overbalance them, they deployed the weighted net.

  So confident of success were the other hunters that they had begun to erect a smoke-tent to dry and preserve any uneaten meat that remained, and to gather fuel for its slow-burning fires.

  Working as quietly as possible, Creethar and Druuth hung the heavy net across the cave mouth, holding it in position by pushing the open mesh over convenient vegetation or wedging it loosely into rocky outcroppings. Then they took up positions on each side of the cave entrance and began shouting loudly and continuously into the dark interior.

  They waited, spears ready, for a furious twasach to come charging out and into their net, but it did not come.

  Between periods of shouting they tossed loose stones through the mesh and heard them clattering against the floor of the cave. But still there was no reaction except for the frightened bleating of the cubs and a low, moaning sound from the adult. The waiting hunters were growing impatient in their hunger and the words that were being shouted up to their First and Second Hunters were be­coming openly disrespectful.

  "Nothing is happening here," said Creethar angrily, "and I am beginning to look ridiculous. Help me lift the bottom edge of the net so that I can get under it. Be careful, or it will pull loose."

  "Be careful yourself," said Druuth sharply, but too quietly for those below to hear her. "It is easy for them to criticize when their feet and tails are on solid ground. Creethar, hunger is no stranger to us on this hunt and the others we have shared. We can starve for a few more hours until the twasachs have to drink again."

  Just as softly Creethar replied, "We cannot wait in this posi­tion for long. Already my legs are cramping and if I stretch or move them as I soon must, the ledge will crumble." And in the sure voice of a First Hunter he went on, "Below there! Throw some dried wood up to the ledge, and a lighted torch. If noise does not drive them out then smoke will."

  Druuth lifted the net carefully and Creethar moved under it until only his tail remained outside the cave. The adult twasach was still moaning steadily and the cubs were making the soft, excited barking sound which indicated that they might be playing together. By the time the fire was set and kindled, Creethar said that his eyes were ready for a night hunt. He could see that the cave was deeper than expected and that the floor sloped upwards and angled sharply to the left so that the exact position of the animals was hidden from him, but the barking of the cubs was sounding frightened rather than playful. The billowing smoke was affecting his eyes so badly that he could see nothing, he said, and he began backing carefully out onto the ledge.

  Druuth realized later that there had been a moment's warn­ing when the moaning sounds ceased, but the beast came silently and so fast out of the smoke that its claws were tearing at Creethar's chest before he could bring up his spear.

  In the open the twasach could have been swept loose and knocked unconscious with a disabling tail-blow, but in the confined space of the cave mouth Creethar could only fend it off desperately with arms that were deeply torn and bleeding while he backed care­fully onto the ledge where Druuth could use her spear. But not care­fully enough.

  Suddenly Creethar's feet became entangled in the net. He lost balance and together the attacker and attacked tumbled backwards over the narrow ledge, and, wrapped together in netting, rolled down the rocky slope. By the time the other hunters got to them the twasach, whose body had ended up underneath that of the much heavier Wem, was dead, and Creethar was not expected to survive for long. But he did survive and while he lived, he would continue to hold authority over them because that was the law.

  The dead twasach was diseased, its hunger-weakened body so covered with open, suppurating sores that it could not be safely de­clared edible. In spite of being severely weakened by their own hunger, the hunters had no choice but to obey when Creethar or­dered them to leave the suspect carcass where it lay. A few of them wondered aloud about the internal organs which might not be af­fected, but their remarks were ignored.

  They were also ordered to call off the hunt immediately, re­turn to the mine and to bring all five of the cubs with them alive. It was not the first time that young twasachs had been caught by hunting parties, but previously they had been killed singly and in the open, never trapped as a complete litter in their den. For the first time in living memory, and provided the hunters and their families living in near starvation at the mine could control their hunger for a few years, there was the possibility of breeding the cubs into a food herd.

  So they built a covered litter for Creethar out of branches and the skins of the smoke-tent and began the slow return to the mine. Even though Creethar was in constant pain and not always clear in his mind or speech, he spent his lucid moments talking to Druuth about the necessity of keeping all of the twasach cubs alive and try­ing to make them promise to continue doing so should he die be­fore reaching the mine.

  This was not strictly according to Wem law, but they did not want to argue and add in any way to the suffering of a greatly re­spected First Hunter, who was soon to die, or to Druuth, his mate.

  Druuth insisted on being one of the litter bearers whether or not it was her turn, so as to make sure the other carriers moved as smoothly as possible over rough ground and to try to talk some of Creethar's pain away. She spoke of many things: of earlier, more successful hunts; of the strange speaking machines dropped at the mine by the off-worlders; but mostly of their first journey together from the lake settlement. Four young adults had made the long, dangerous journey in search of mates, just as the new hunters among the lake people would travel to the mine or other groups for the same purpose, because the children were sickly or damaged in their minds if the Wem mated within their own tribe. Creethar had shown his courage and strength and had claimed his right of first choice by leaving his traveling companions far behind and arriving at the lake three days before they did, and his choice had been Druuth.

  But when the going was rough and Creethar's broken bones were grinding together so that she could almost hear his silent screaming in her mind, Druuth talked only about that first mating journey together, and of the things they had said and done during their long, unhurried, and wonderful return to her new home in the mine.

  Creethar's deteriorating condition during the return journey was being described in such horrifying detail by Druuth that Gurronsevas was feeling a growing inner distress, and he did not have to be an empath to sense the effect of the words on Remrath, its par­ent. But before he could speak, the voice of Prilicla said everything that he wanted to say.

  "Friend Gurronsevas," said the empath. "The information you have obtained regarding the patient's injuries and subsequent lack of treatment is helpful. But we have enough for the time being, and your friend Remrath is suffering acute emotional distress. Please sever contact with Druuth as quickly as possible and give Remrath the choice of going back in Rhabwar or with the hunting party, then return to the ship."

  When he relayed the message, Remrath said, "Ancient in years as I am, I could probably walk faster than this starving bunch. But no, I shall return on your ship. There, there are preparations I must make."

  Again Gurronsevas sensed the other's distress. In an attempt at reassurance, he said, "Please do not worry, Remrath. The off-worlders on the ship know their business and Creethar is in good hands. Would you like to watch them work?

  "No!" said Remrath sharply. In a softer voice it went on, "To you it may appear that I am a weak and cowardly parent. But re­member, your o
ff-worlders have asked for this responsibility and I have passed it to them. It is very insensitive of you, Gurronsevas, to ask me to watch what they do to my offspring. This is informa­tion I prefer not to know. Please return me to the mine as quickly as possible."

  During the return flight the Wem did not spare so much as a glance at the medical team who were working on Creethar, nor did it speak another word to Gurronsevas or anyone else. He tried to imagine how he would have felt if one of his children, supposing there had been any, had been seriously injured and he had been of­fered the chance to watch the surgeons working on it.

  Perhaps Remrath was right and his remark had been most in­sensitive.

  Chapter 29

  Unlike Remrath, Gurronsevas could not avoid seeing or at least hearing everything that was being done. Each stage of the pro­cedure was being relayed onto the casualty deck's large repeater screen and, since it was the first major operation on a life-form new to the Federation, the procedure was being recorded for future study, which meant that the accompanying verbal commentary was precise and detailed. Even when he directed all of his eyes away from the screen, he could not escape the word-pictures that the voices were painting.

  Beyond the direct vision port the steep green slopes of the val­ley dimmed gradually into the monochrome of twilight and then to the near-absolute darkness that was possible only on a moonless world in a galactic sector where the star-systems were sparse, and still they worked and talked over the patient. But as the first grey hint of dawn diluted the blackness, the work slowed to a stop and the commentary went into the summation phase.

  The voices were sounding increasingly concerned.

  "...You will observe," Prilicla was saying, "that the simple and complicated fractures to the leg, fore-limb, and rib cage have been reduced and immobilized where necessary, and the incised and lacerated wounds and abrasions irrigated, sutured and covered with sterile dressings. Because of the Wem physiological data fur­nished by Tawsar and Remrath, no difficulties were experienced during the surgical repair work. It is the minor injuries, the areas of surface laceration or abrasion associated with the fractures, which are the major cause of concern and which make the prognosis un­certain..."

  "Translated," said Naydrad, its pointed head turning toward Gurronsevas, "it means the operation was a success but the patient will probably die."

  None of the others remonstrated with it. Probably the Charge Nurse was saying only what the medical team was already think­ing.

  "...While it is unnecessary to remind some of you," Prilicla went on, for the non-medical Gurronsevas's benefit, "that path­ogens evolved on one world cannot affect the life-forms of an­other, the same cannot be said for the curative medication used by different species. We have developed a single, emergency-use specific that is effective against infections of this type found in the majority of the warm-blooded, oxygen-breathing life-forms, but there are a few species on whom the medication is lethal. Even with Sector General's facilities a lengthy investigation—two or three weeks, at minimum—would be required before it could be de­clared safe for use on a Wem patient. We took a small risk with the anesthetic..."

  "We may have to take the big one, Doctor," Murchison broke in sharply. Then in a more clinical voice, it went on, "The patient is severely debilitated, initially by its injuries, then by the continu­ing trauma of its long journey without treatment, and now by un­avoidable post-operative shock. The shock is being controlled, but the only positive measures we have been able to take are running in pure oxygen and intravenous feeding lines. At least we know enough about the Wem basic metabolism not to poison it with an IV drip.

  "Whether or not to risk using Wem-untested medication is a decision that will have to be made very soon," Murchison went on. "Thankfully it isn't mine to make. I don't have to mention the Cromsaggar Incident, because we must all be remembering it, when Lioren used untested medication and came close to committing species genocide. It isn't the fault of the Wem that they know noth­ing about the treatment of even the simplest injuries or infections. Seemingly, they have learned to accept the idea that a minor injury nearly always results in death or permanent disability. So they have passed responsibility for Creethar's treatment to us, the wonder­ful, medically advanced off-worlders. And what are we doing? We are trusting to the patient's natural resistance to fight off what should be a minor infection.

  "In its present condition I doubt whether the patient has any resistance left."

  "The decision is..." began Prilicla, then interrupted itself. "Gurronsevas, you are emoting very strongly, a combination of impatience, irritation and frustration characteristic of a person who is in disagreement but wants badly to speak. Quickly please, what is it that you want to say?"

  "Pathologist Murchison is too critical of the Wem," Gurron­sevas replied. "And wrong. They do treat minor, non-surgical ail­ments. Usually the kitchen staff double as healers, so that—"

  "Are they better healers than they are cooks?" Naydrad broke in, its fur tufting with impatience.

  "I am not qualified," said Gurronsevas, "to give an opinion on medical matters, but I wanted to—"

  "Then why," said Murchison sharply, "are you interrupting a clinical discussion?"

  "Please go on, Gurronsevas," said Prilicla, gently but very firmly. "I feel you wanting to help."

  As briefly as possible he described one of his recent food ex­periments in the mine kitchen, where he was continually trying to find combinations of taste and consistency that would lift the veg­etable meals to a level where, so far as the tradition-bound Wem were concerned, they would compete successfully with their remembered meat dishes. He had been trying every variety of root, leaf and berry that he could find, including those he found in a small and apparently little-used storage cupboard. His first attempt to in­corporate them into a main dish had led to much unexplained hi­larity among the kitchen staff until Remrath had told him that he was using stale materials from their medicinal herbs store.

  "From the discussion that followed," he went on, "I learned that, while the Wem would not cut surgically into a living body, they use herbal remedies to treat simple medical conditions. Respiratory difficulties, problems encountered with the evacuation of body wastes, and superficial wounds are treated in this way, usually with hot poultices made from a paste of certain clays and herbs, and grasses to bind the poultice together and allow easier application to the injured area. When I asked them about your patient's injuries, Remrath said that Creethar was seriously and irreparably damaged, that parts of his body had been broken, and that treating the su­perficial damage would merely prolong suffering that had already gone on for far too long."

  While he had been speaking, Prilicla had alighted on the bot­tom edge of Creethar's bed and was watching Gurronsevas, as silent and still as all the others. The patient's respirator was beginning to sound loud.

  Hesitantly, he went on, "If, if I understand you correctly, Creethar's internal injuries, the fractures, have been treated and it is the surface wounds that are causing concern. That was why I mentioned—"

  "Gurronsevas, I'm sorry," Murchison broke in again, "I did not think you could make any contribution, and impatience made me forget my manners. Even with the availability of these local folk-remedies whose effectiveness is still in doubt, we may not be able to cure our patient. But its chances have improved."

  The pathologist laughed suddenly, but it was the sharp, bark­ing sound which, Gurronsevas thought, indicated a release of ten­sion rather than amusement. It went on, "But just look at us! We have the most technologically advanced ambulance ship in known space with, I say in all modesty, a medical team with the experience to match it, and we're back to using dark-age poultices! When Peter gets to hear about this, he will never let us live it down. Especially if the treatment works."

  Feeling confused, Gurronsevas said, "I do not know the en­tity, Peter. Is it important?"

  "You do," said Prilicla, wings beating slowly as it rose to
hover above the patient. "Peter is the name used by family and friends for Pathologist Murchison's life-mate, Diagnostician Conway, a being who in the past has been no stranger to unusual medical practices. But the matter is not important to our present situation. What is important is that you speak with Remrath as quickly as possible. Ask it for supplies of its herbal medications, with information regard­ing their application and use. That is important, friend Gurron­sevas, and very, very urgent."

  Before replying, Gurronsevas turned one eye towards the di­rect vision port. The valley was still in darkness but the slopes of the mountains were outlined by the grey light of early dawn.

  He said, "My memory for colors and shapes and smells, as well as for words of explanation, is excellent. If the matter is urgent there will be no need to talk again with Remrath. I shall leave shortly to begin gathering the necessary herbs and mosses. They are at their most effective when gathered early in the morning."

  Chapter 30

  Over the next four days Gurronsevas kept the ambulance ship supplied with fresh herbal vegetation when required, together with the Wem cook-healer's instructions for using it, but he con­tinued to spend as much time as possible in the mine kitchen. His reasons for doing so were both positive and negative.

  Whenever he was present on the casualty deck, Murchison, Danalta and Naydrad were always worrying aloud about the ethi­cal implications of a lay person dictating a patient's course of med­ical treatment, and where the responsibility for treating Creethar really lay. Nothing was said to him directly, but he did not know how to answer the unspoken criticism and felt very disturbed by it, even though he normally considered the opinions of other people toward him to be of no importance. Since he had left the kitchens of the Cromingan-Shesk, where his authority had been absolute, his self-confidence had been under constant and successful attack. It was not a nice feeling.

 

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