by James Gunn
The gates rolled up and left openings in the factory walls. Laborers spilled out into the street: all kinds of them, men and women, children and ancients, sickly and strong. Yet there was a sameness to them. They were ragged and dirty and diseased; they were the city dwellers.
They should have been miserable, but they were usually happy. They would look up at the blue sky, if the smog had not yet crept up from the river, and laugh, for no reason at all. The children would play tag between their parents’ legs, yelling and giggling. Even the ancients would smile indulgently.
It was the healthy squires who were sober and concerned. Well, it was natural. Ignorance can be happy; the citizens need not be concerned about good health or immortality. It was beyond them. They could appear on a summer day like the mayfly and flutter about gaily and die. But knowledge had to worry; immortality had its price.
Remembering that always made Harry feel better. Seeing the great hordes of citizens with no chance for immortality made him self-conscious about his advantages. He had been raised in a suburban villa not far from the city’s diseases and carcinogens. From infancy he had received the finest of medical care. He had been through four years of high school, eight years of medical school, and almost three years of residency training.
That gave him a head start toward immortality. It was right that he should pay for it with concern.
Where do they all come from? he thought. They must breed like rabbits in those warrens. Where do they all go to? Back into the wreckage of the city, like the rats and the vermin.
He shuddered. Really, they are almost another race.
Tonight, though, they weren’t laughing and singing. Even the children were silent. They marched down the street soberly, almost the only sound the tramp of their bare feet on the cracked pavement. Even the doors of the blood bank weren’t busy.
Harry shrugged. Sometimes they were like this. The reason would be something absurd—a gang fight, company trouble, some dark religious rite that could never really be stamped out. Maybe it had something to do with the phases of the moon.
He went back into the clinic to get ready. The first patient was a young woman. She was an attractive creature with blond hair worn long around her shoulders and a ripe body—if you could ignore the dirt and the odor that drifted even into the professional chamber behind the consultation room.
He resisted an impulse to have her disrobe. Not because of any consequences—what was a citizen’s chastity? A mythical thing like the unicorn. Besides, they expected it. From the stories the other doctors told, he thought they must come to the clinic for that purpose. But there was no use tempting himself. He would feel unclean for days.
She babbled as they always did. She had sinned against nature. She had not been getting enough sleep. She had not been taking her vitamins regularly. She had bought illicit terramycin from a shover for a bladder infection. It was all predictable and boring.
“I see,” he kept muttering. And then, “I’m going to take a diagnosis now. Don’t be frightened.”
He switched on the diagnostic machine. A sphygmomanometer crept up snakelike from beneath the Freudian couch and encircled her arm. A mouthpiece slipped between her lips. A stethoscope counted her pulse. A skullcap fitted itself to her head. Metal caps slipped over her fingertips. Bracelets encircled her ankles. A band wrapped itself around her hips. The machine punctured, withdrew samples, counted, measured, listened, compared, correlated. . . .
In a moment it was over. Harry had his diagnosis. She was anemic; they all were. They couldn’t resist that fifty dollars.
“Married?” he asked.
“Nah,” she said hesitantly.
“Better not waste any time. You’re pregnant.”
“Prag-nant?” she repeated.
“You’re going to have a baby.”
A joyful light broke across her face. “Aw! Is that all! I thought maybe it was a too-more. A baby I can take care of nicely. Tell me, Doctor, will it be boy or girl?”
“A boy,” Harry said wearily. The slut! Why did it always irritate him so?
She got up from the couch with a lithe, careless grace. “Thank you, Doctor. I will go tell Georgie. He will be angry for a little, but I know how to make him glad.”
There were others waiting in the consultation rooms, contemplating their symptoms. Harry checked the panel: a woman with pleurisy, a man with cancer, a child with rheumatic fever. . . . But Harry stepped out into the clinic to see if the girl dropped anything into the donation box as she passed. She didn’t. Instead, she paused by the shover hawking his wares just outside the clinic door.
“Get your aureomycin here,” he ranted, “your penicillin, your terramycin. A hypodermic with every purchase. Good health! Good health! Don’t let that infection cost you your job, your health, your life. Get your filters, your antiseptics, your vitamins. Get your amulets, your good-luck charms. I have here a radium needle which has already saved thirteen lives. And here is an ampule of elixir vitae. Get your ilotycin here. . . .”
The girl bought an amulet and hurried off to Georgie. A lump of anger burned in Harry’s throat.
The throngs were still marching silently in the street. In the back of the clinic, a woman was kneeling at the operating table. She took a vitamin pill and a paper cup of tonic from the dispensary.
Behind the walls the sirens started. Harry turned toward the doorway. The gate in the Medical Center wall rolled up.
First came the outriders on their motorcycles. The people in the street scattered to the walls on either side, leaving a lane down the center of the street. The outriders brushed carelessly close to them—healthy young squires, their nose filters in place, their goggled eyes haughty, their guns slung low on their hips.
That would have been something, Harry thought enviously—to have been a company policeman. There was a dash to them, a hint of violence. They were hell on wheels. And if they were one-tenth as successful with women as they were reputed to be, there was no woman—from citizen through technician and nurse up to their suburban peers—who was immune to their virility.
Well, let them have the glamour and the women. He had taken the safer and more certain route to immortality. Few company policemen made it.
After the outriders came an ambulance, its armored ports closed, its automatic 40-millimeter gun roaming restlessly for a target. More outriders covered the rear. Above the convoy a helicopter swooped low.
Something glinted in the sunlight, became a line of small round objects beneath the helicopter, dropping in an arc toward the street. One after another they broke with fragile, popping sounds. They strung up through the convoy.
Like puppets when the puppeteer has released the strings, the outriders toppled to the street, skidding limply as their motorcycles slowed and stopped on their single wheels.
The ambulance could not stop. It rolled over one of the fallen outriders and crashed into a motorcycle, bulldozing it out of the way. The 40-millimeter gun jerked erratically to fix its radar sight on the helicopter, but the plane was skimming the rooftops. Before the gun could get the range the plane was gone.
Harry smelled something sharply penetrating. His head felt swollen and light. The street tilted and then straightened.
In the midst of the crowd beyond the ambulance an arm swung up. Something dark sailed through the air and smashed against the top of the ambulance. Flames splashed across it. They dripped down the sides, ran into gun slits and observation ports, were drawn into the air intake.
A moment followed in which nothing happened. The scene was like a frozen tableau—the ambulance and the motorcycles balanced in the street, the outriders and some of the nearest citizens crumpled and twisted on the pavement, the citizens watching, the flames licking up toward greasy, black smoke. . . .
The side door of the ambulance fell open. A medic staggered out, clutching something in one hand, beating at flames on his white jacket with the other.
The citizens watched silently, not moving to
help or hinder. From among them stepped a dark-haired man. His hand went up. It held something limp and dark. The hand came down against the medic’s head.
No sound came to Harry over the roar of the idling motorcycles and ambulance. The pantomime continued, and he was part of the frozen audience as the medic fell and the man stooped, patted out the flames with his bare hands, picked the object out of the medic’s hand, and looked at the ambulance door.
A girl stood there, Harry noticed. From this distance Harry could tell little more than that she was dark-haired and slender.
The flames on the ambulance had burned themselves out. The girl remained in the doorway, not moving. The man beside the fallen medic looked at her, started to hold out a hand, stopped, let it drop, turned, and faded back into the crowd.
Less than two minutes had passed since the sirens began.
Silently the citizens pressed forward. The girl turned and went back into the ambulance. The citizens stripped the outriders of their clothing and weapons, looted the ambulance of its black bag and medical supplies, picked up their fallen fellows, and disappeared.
It was like magic. One moment the street was full of them. The next moment they were gone. The street was empty of life.
Behind the Medical Center walls the sirens began again.
It was like the release from a spell. Harry began running down the street, his throat swelling with shouts. There were no words to them.
Out of the ambulance came a young boy. He was slim and small—no more than seven years old. He had blond hair, cut very short, and dark eyes in a tanned face. He wore a ragged T-shirt that once might have been white and a pair of blue jeans cut off above the knees.
He reached an arm back into the ambulance. A yellowed claw came out to meet it, and then an arm. The arm was a gnarled stick encircled with ropy blue veins like lianas. It was attached to a man on stiff, stiltlike legs. He was very old. His hair was thin, white silk. His scalp and face were wrinkled parchment. A tattered tunic fell from bony shoulders, around his permanently bent back, and was caught in folds around his loins.
The boy led the old man slowly and carefully into the ruined street, because the man was blind, his eyelids flat and dark over empty sockets. The old man bent painfully over the fallen medic. His fingers explored the medic’s skull. Then he moved to the outrider who had been run over by the ambulance. The man’s chest was crushed; a pink froth edged his lips as punctured lungs gasped for breath.
He was as good as dead. Medical science could do nothing for injuries that severe, that extensive.
Harry reached the old man, seized him by one bony shoulder. “What do you think you’re doing?” he asked.
The old man didn’t move. He held to the outrider’s hand for a moment and then creaked to his feet. “Healing,” he answered in a voice like the whisper of sandpaper.
“That man’s dying,” Harry said.
“So are we all,” said the old man.
Harry glanced down at the outrider. Was he breathing more easily, or was that illusion?
The stretcher bearers reached them.
* * *
Harry had a difficult time finding the dean’s office. The Medical Center covered hundreds of city blocks, and it had grown under a strange stimulus of its own. No one had ever planned for it to be so big, but it had sprouted an arm here when demand for medical care and research outgrew the space available, a wing there, and arteries through and under and around. . . .
He followed the glowing guidestick through the unmarked corridors, and tried to remember the way. But it was useless. He inserted the stick into the lock on an armored door. The door swallowed the stick and opened. As soon as Harry had entered, the door swung shut and locked. He was in a bare anteroom. On a metal bench bolted to the floor along one wall sat the boy and the old man from the ambulance. The boy looked up at Harry curiously, and then his gaze returned to his folded hands. The old man rested against the wall.
A little farther along the bench was a girl. She looked like the girl who had stood in the doorway of the ambulance, but she was smaller than he had thought and younger. Her face was pale. Only her blue eyes were vivid as they looked at him with a curious appeal and then faded. His gaze dropped to her figure; it was boyish and unformed, clad in a simple brown dress belted at the waist. She was no more than twelve or thirteen years old, he thought.
The reception box had to repeat the question twice: “Name?”
“Doctor Harry Elliott,” he said.
“Advance for confirmation.”
He went to the wall beside the far door and put his right hand against the plate set into it. A light flashed into his right eye, comparing retinal patterns.
“Deposit all metal objects in the receptacle,” the box said.
Harry hesitated and then pulled his stethoscope out of his jacket pocket, removed his watch, emptied his trouser pockets of coins and pocketknife and hypospray.
Something clicked. “Nose filters,” the box said.
Harry put those into the receptacle, too. The girl was watching him, but when he looked at her, her eyes moved away. The door opened. He went through the doorway. The door closed behind him.
Dean Mock’s office was a magnificent room, thirty feet long and twenty feet wide. It was decorated in mid-Victorian style. The furniture all looked like real antiques, especially the yellow-oak rolltop desk and the mahogany instrument cabinet.
The room looked rich and impressive. Personally, though, Harry preferred Twentieth Century Modern. Its clean chromium-and-glass lines were aesthetically pleasing; moreover, they were from the respectable early days of medical science—that period when mankind first began to realize that good health was not merely an accident, that it could be bought if men were willing to pay the price.
Harry had seen Dean Mock before but never to speak to. His parents couldn’t understand that. They thought he was the peer of everyone in the Medical Center because he was a doctor. He kept telling them how big the place was, how many people it contained: 75,000, 100,000—only the statisticians knew how many. It didn’t do any good; they still couldn’t understand. Harry had given up trying.
The dean didn’t know Harry. He sat behind the rolltop desk in his white jacket and studied Harry’s record cast up on the frosted glass insert. He was good at reading as if he were simply glancing down, but you couldn’t deceive a man who had studied like that for ten years in this Center alone.
The dean’s black hair was thinning. He was almost eighty years old now, but he didn’t look it. He came of good stock, and he had had the best of medical care. He was good for another twenty years, Harry estimated, without longevity shots. By that time, surely, with his position and his accomplishments, he would be voted a reprieve.
Once, when a bomb had exploded in the power room, some of the doctors had whispered in the safe darkness that Mock’s youthful appearance had a more reasonable explanation than heredity, but they were wrong. Harry had searched the immortality lists, and Mock’s name wasn’t on them.
Mock looked up quickly and caught Harry staring at him. Harry glanced away, but not before he had seen in Mock’s eyes a look of—what?—fright? Desperation?
Harry couldn’t understand it. The raid had been daring, this close to the Center walls, but nothing new. There had been raids before; there would be raids again. Any time there is something valuable, lawless men will try to steal it. In Harry’s day it happened to be medicine.
Mock said abruptly, “Then you saw the man? You could recognize him if you saw him again, or if you had a good solidograph?”
“Yes, sir,” Harry said. Why was Mock making such a production out of it? He had already been over this with the head resident and the chief of the company police.
“Do you know Governor Weaver?” Mock asked.
“An Immortal?” Mock might as well have asked if he knew God.
“No, no,” Mock said impatiently. “Do you know where he lives?”
“In the governor’s
mansion. Forty miles from here, almost due west.”
“Yes, yes,” Mock said. “You’re going to carry a message to him, a message. The shipment has been hijacked. Hijacked.” Mock had developed a nervous habit of repeating words. Harry had to listen intently to keep from being distracted. “It will be a week before another shipment is ready, a week. How we will get it to him I don’t know. I don’t know.” The last statement was muttered to himself.
Harry tried to make sense out of it. Carry a message to the governor? “Why don’t you call him?” he said, unthinking.
But the question only roused Mock out of his introspection. “The underground cables are cut. Cut. No use repairing them. Repairmen get shot. And even if they’re fixed, they’re only cut again the next night. Radio and television are jammed. Get ready. You’ll have to hurry to get out the southwest gate before curfew.”
“A pass will get me through,” Harry said, uncomprehending. Was Mock going insane?
“Didn’t I tell you? Tell you?” Mock passed the back of his hand across his forehead as if to clear away cobwebs. “You’re going alone, on foot, dressed as a citizen. A convoy would be cut to pieces. To pieces. We’ve tried. We’ve been out of touch with the governor for three weeks. Three weeks! He must be getting impatient. Never make the governor impatient. It isn’t healthy.”
For the first time Harry really understood what the dean was asking him to do. The governor! He had it in his power to cut half a lifetime off Harry’s personal quest for immortality. “But my residency—”
Mock looked wise. “The governor can do you more good than a dozen boards. More good.”
Harry caught his lower lip between his teeth and counted off on his fingers. “I’ll need nose filters, a small medical kit, a gun—”
Mock was shaking his head. “None of those. Out of character. If you reach the governor’s mansion, it will be because you pass as a citizen, not because you defend yourself well or heal up your wounds afterward. And a day or two without filters won’t reduce your life expectancy appreciably. Well, Doctor? Will you get through?”