Minutes later they turned in from the corridor, went through another, shorter pa.s.sageway and then came to a door marked: Resident Surgeon.
They knocked and a deep voice boomed: "Come in!"
It was a medium-sized room, clearly a dispensary. There was an operating table, a sterilizer, tall gla.s.s-fronted instrument cabinets and a refrigerator. At the far end of the room a hulking, bear-like man sat behind a magnalloy desk. The nameplate on the desk said: Hal H. Wilc.o.x, M.D.
"Howdy, gents," said Dr. Hal H. Wilc.o.x, shattering the moon-silence with a vengeance. "What can I do for you?" he was all smiles.
That smile, decided Pell, didn"t quite match the shrewdness of his eyes.
Have to watch this boy, maybe. There was a big quartz window behind the man so that for the moment Pell saw him almost in silhouette. "We"re from _Current_ magazine," said Pell. "I"m d.i.c.k Pell and this is Steve Kronski. You got our radio, I guess."
"Oh, yes. Yes, indeed." Wilc.o.x creaked way back in his chair. "You"re the fellas want to do a story on us moon surgeons."
"That"s right." Pell fumbled a little self-consciously with the gravity weights clipped to his trousers. Took a while for moon visitors to get used to them, everybody said.
"Well, I don"t know exactly as how there"s much of a story in what we do. We"re just a bunch of sawbones stationed here, that"s all."
"We"re interested in the diseases peculiar to the moon," said Pell. "For instance, why do the permanent residents up here have to have an inoculation every year?"
"That"s for the Venusian rash. Thought everybody knew that."
"Venusian rash?"
"Nearest thing we ever had to it on Earth was Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever. It"s a rickettsia disease. Makes a fella pretty sick; sometimes kills him in two, three days. It started when they had those Venusian construction workers and tunnel men here, oh, long before the war. Under certain conditions the rickettsia stays dormant and then pops up again."
"And the inoculation"s for that?"
"Standard. Once a year. You got the inoculation yourself, no doubt, before you jumped off for the moon."
"Where does the serum or whatever you call it come from?"
Pell thought he saw Wilc.o.x"s eyes flicker. The doctor said, "It"s stored at the main landings. We draw it as we need it from there."
"Have any here now?"
Wilc.o.x"s eyes did move this time. He looked at the refrigerator--but only for the veriest moment. "Don"t really reckon so," he said finally.
He was staring blankly at Pell again.
Pell patted his pockets, turned to Kronski and said, "You know, I think we"re out of cigarettes." Before Kronski could answer he moved to the big quartz window behind Wilc.o.x"s desk. He gazed at the moonscape. "Just can"t get over how big and quiet it is," he said.
Wilc.o.x turned and gazed with him.
Kronski drew his freezer. He pointed it, squeezed, and there was a soft, momentary buzzing and a twinkling of violet sparks at the muzzle of the weapon.
Wilc.o.x sat where he was, frozen, knowing nothing.
Pell turned fast. "Come on, Steve. Let"s get it." They both stepped to the refrigerator.
They had only seconds; Kronski"s weapon had been set at a low reading.
The time of paralysis varied with the individual and Doc Wilc.o.x looked husky enough not to stay frozen very long. If Pell and Kronski returned to their original positions after he came out of it he would never know that anything had happened.
Far back on a lower shelf of the refrigerator were a dozen small bottles of the same type. Pell grabbed one, glanced at the label, nodded, and dropped it into his pocket. They took their places again.
A few moments later Wilc.o.x moved slightly and said, "Yup. Moon"s a funny place all right. You either like it or you don"t."
The rest of the conversation was fairly uninspired. Pell didn"t want to walk out too quickly, and had to keep up the pretense of interviewing Wilc.o.x for a magazine story. It wasn"t easy. They excused themselves finally, saying they"d be back for more information as soon as they made up some notes and got the overall picture--whatever that meant. Wilc.o.x seemed satisfied with it.
They hurried back along the tunnel, descended to another level and found the Augea Post Office. They showed the postmaster their C.I.B. shields and identification cards and arranged for quick and special handling for the bottle of vaccine. Pell marked it _Attention, Lab_, and it was scheduled to take a quick rocket to the Endymion landing and the next unmanned mail rocket back to World City.
Pell stayed at the Post Office to make out a quick report on the incident so he wouldn"t have to bore Ciel by doing it in the room, and Kronski sauntered on back to the hotel.
There was a fax receiver there and Pell, missing the hourly voice bulletins of World City Underground, checked it for news. The pages were coming out in a long tongue. He looked at the first headline:
VENUSIAN OBSERVERS ADMITTED TO WORLD CONGRESS
Well, that was a step in the right direction. Maybe one of these days they"d get around to a Solar Congress, as they ought to. The recent open war with Venus had taught both Earthmen and Venusians a lot about s.p.a.ce travel, and it was probably possible to explore the solar system further right now. No one had yet gone beyond the asteroids. Recent observations from the telescope stations here on the moon had found what seemed to be geometrical markings on some of Jupiter"s satellites. Life there? Could be. Candidates for a brotherhood of the zodiac--if both Terrans and Venusians could get the concept of brotherhood pounded through their still partially savage skulls.
Another headline:
"WE CAN LICK UNIVERSE"--WAR SEC
Not so good, that. Loose talk. Actually it was an Undersecretary of War who had said it. Pell ran over the rest of the article quickly and came to what seemed to him a significant excerpt. "_Certain patriotic groups in the world today are ready and willing to make the necessary sacrifices to get it over with. There is a fundamental difference between Earthmen and other creatures of the system, and this difference can be resolved only by the dominance of one over the other._"
Supremist stuff. Strictly. If this Undersecretary were not actually a member he was at least a supporter of the Supremist line. And that line had an appeal for the unthinking, Pell had to admit. It was pleasant to convince yourself that you were a superior specimen, that you were chosen....
VENUSIAN SPY SUSPECTS HELD ON MARS
Pell frowned deeply at that one and read the story. A couple of Venusian miners on Mars had wandered too close to one of the Earth military outposts, and had been nabbed. He doubted that they were spies; he doubted that the authorities holding them thought so. But it seemed to make a better story with a slight scare angle. He thought about how Mars was divided at an arbitrary meridian--half to Venus, half to Earth. The division solved nothing, pleased n.o.body. Joe Citizen, the man in the tunnels could see these things, why couldn"t these so-called trained diplomats?
Pell finished his report, questioned the Postmaster a little on routine facts concerning the town, and went back to the hotel.
Ciel was waiting for him. She was in a smart, frontless frock of silvercloth. Her golden hair shone. Her large, dark eyes looked deep, moist, alive. She looked at him questioningly? and he read the silent question: _Now can you spare a little time?_
"Baby," he said softly, and kissed her.
"Mm," he said when he had finished kissing her.
The voice-phone rang.
He said, "d.a.m.n it."
It was Kronski, in his own room next door. "Did Wilc.o.x leave yet?" he asked.
"Wilc.o.x?"
"Yeah. The Doc. Is he still there?"