Authors: S. L. Viehl
Tags: #Women Physicians, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Life on Other Planets, #General, #Science Fiction; American, #American, #Adventure, #Speculative Fiction
I infused Dhreen with antibiotics to combat the pneumonia forming in his lung/heart. “What?”
“Pilot Dhreen’s body absorbed one of the Lok-Teel.” She indicated the area above his liver. “At least, I think it did.”
I scanned the site, but found no evidence of any foreign substances. “Did you see the mold enter his body?”
“No, but it disappeared while it was cleaning his torso. The critical care unit was sealed, and there was no place for it to go, so I assumed it entered him somehow.”
“Okay.” I rescanned Dhreen’s liver, and found it had doubled in size. I was tempted to take him in for exploratory surgery, but with the condition of his lung/heart I’d be pushing my luck. “Set up to insert another chest tube.”
Once Savetka had everything prepared, I injected Dhreen with a local, then reopened the drain site and inserted the tube. Almost immediately, the putty-colored pseudopod of the Lok-Teel appeared, filling the tube and oozing out onto Dhreen’s stomach.
I looked at the nurse, who was wide-eyed. “Found your missing mold.”
Another scan showed Dhreen’s liver had shrunk again, but was still functioning normally. I had Savetka run a full series of blood and tissue scans while I helped Squilyp finish examining and treating the remainder of the sojourn team for minor injuries.
Squilyp listened as I described the absorption of the Lok-teel, and agreed more tests would be needed before we could assume the busy little mold had actually gone inside Dhreen’s body and healed his liver. He didn’t seem happy about it, though, and I found out why when he ordered me into his office.
“I ought to relieve you of duty for a week,” the Omorr said. “Jumping out of a launch in midair. Have you lost whatever is left of your senses?”
“Hard to say. I haven’t exactly relocated them yet.”
“Don’t you make jokes about this, Doctor. You know exactly what kind of damage a fall like that would have done to you!”
I sat down in the uncomfortable chair. After two days on Taercal, it felt like a cloud. “I would have healed.”
“Indeed.” Squilyp dropped some charts on his desk and stood behind it. His expression and tone reminded me a little of Tonetka Torin, our former Senior Healer. She’d yelled similar things at me, many times. “You take your gifts for granted.”
“Squilyp, you’ve seen third-degree burns disappear from my skin. It wouldn’t have hurt me.”
“Even if your immune system can heal the physical damage, what if you had sustained a head injury? Can your creator’s genetic engineering cope with the neural results of massive brain damage?”
There was more to the brain than neural tissue. It was entirely possible I could become an immortal vegetable, under the right circumstances. I’d never considered that before. “All right, so it was a little stupid.”
“It was a consummately idiotic thing to do.”
“I wasn’t abandoning him on that god-awful world. You weren’t down there; you didn’t see what those people are like.” And the worms. And the mold. And their crazy religion. “I can’t imagine what Hawk is going through, after meeting those demented freaks. He didn’t belong on Terra, and now”-I sighed-“now he’s got nothing left to call his own, except us.”
“We will provide counseling, if necessary, to see him through this.” My boss pulled a data pad out and read the screen. “He hasn’t reported for his follow-up exam. Schedule it for the morning.”
I’d already signaled Hawk’s quarters, but he hadn’t answered. “Can we give him a few days?”
“I’m not inclined to do anything for you but find my own stick and beat you with it.” He rubbed a membrane over his gildrells. “What has Duncan to say about this?”
“I don’t know.” I’d also signaled his duty station, but his console had been programmed to block incoming relays. “He’s not talking to me.”
The Omorr nodded. “A sensible man.”
“Yeah, maybe he should beat me with a stick, too.”
“I’ll suggest that the next time I see him. Now, go home.”
My husband and daughter had gotten home before me. Marel was happy to see me when I came in, but a still-silent Duncan only handed her off to me and left. My daughter didn’t enjoy her bubble bath as much with only her mother in attendance.
Her little face grew serious as I dried her off and got her into her night tunic. “Daddy mad ad you, Mama.”
“I know he is.” We’d never fought in front of Marel before, and all Duncan was doing was giving me the stone-face treatment, but she wasn’t stupid. “I did a silly thing, trying to help Uncle Hawk. Daddy didn’t like what I did.”
“Tell Daddy sorry you noddy,” was my daughter’s suggestion. “He give you dime-owd.”
“I will, sweetheart.” I held her close. My conscience kicked me even harder than before as the feelings of love and protectiveness welled up in me. I owed my life to Reever, a couple of times over. I owed it to Marel to be a good mother. Not something I could do if I was hooked up to life support with a drool-bib tucked around my neck. “Don’t be upset. Daddy will forgive me, in a few years.”
“I not ’sed.” She patted my face like she was the indulgent parent. “You good mama.”
“I’m working on it, baby.”
Alunthri came to see me later that evening, after it had been discharged from Medical. Its miserable, pink-rimmed eyes met mine. “Cherijo, I know it’s late, but may I come in?”
“Sure.” I stepped aside from the open panel. “If you’re looking for Reever, I guess he’s either walking around the ship or working out in one of the environomes.” Or punching out a wall somewhere where the dented alloy wouldn’t be noticeable.
“No, I wish to speak with you.” It sat down, and refused my offer of a drink. So I sat down across from it. “I’ve been thinking about that native. You know, the one they…” It coughed, then struggled to regain its rocky composure. “Was there something I should have done?”
“Believe me, Alunthri, there was
nothing
you could have done. I don’t understand why, but that man’s whole purpose in life was to sacrifice himself. He thought you were his god, and he did what he was trained to do.”
“Perhaps it is as you say.” It made a small, wistful sound. “I still find it very hard to accept, knowing even indirectly, I was responsible for his death.” It blinked a few times. “I have never harmed
anyone.”
“You didn’t harm anyone. You tried to stop them.”
“I should have been able to prevent it. They believed me their god-why couldn’t I prevent it?” Alunthri studied one of its paws. “I spent hours in the cleanser, trying to get the blood out of my fur. I- I think I can still see it.”
“Oh, no, Alunthri. No.”
It held the paw up for my inspection, new tears making dark streaks in its silvery facial fur. “Can you? Can you see it?”
My heart constricted as I got up and went over to the sofa, and sat down beside my friend. Carefully, I took its paw between my hands. “There’s no blood on you, pal. I promise.”
Alunthri curled up against me, making that low, wretched sound all felines do when frightened or lonely. “I am so sorry this happened, Cherijo.”
My eyes stung, too. “It’s okay. Everything will be okay.” I stroked my hand over the Chakacat’s back and murmured to it, until it fell asleep. I eased up and found a blanket to cover my friend with, then turned out most of the optic emitters and sat in the dark, waiting for Reever to come home.
Sometime in the middle of the night, I woke up to find my husband holding me against him with one arm, his hand stroking my hair. We were on our sleeping platform, so I surmised he must have come home and carried me there.
“Hey.” I propped myself up on one elbow and smothered a yawn. “Can’t sleep?”
“No.”
“Want to hear how sorry I am about today?”
“No.”
“Okay.” I tentatively touched his bare chest. He slept naked, something I thoroughly enjoyed. Maybe there was another, better way to show him how much I loved him. “I guess anything more than sleeping together is out of the-”
His mouth landed on mine, not hard enough to bruise, but with the lightest of touches, just enough to shut me up and make me forget what I was going to say. He rolled over with me until I was on my back and his long body covered me.
He entered my mind a moment before his legs parted mine.
Waenara
. His hands found the edge of my tunic, and pulled it slowly up over my head. The air in our quarters felt cool against my skin, almost as good as his touch.
You feel so good under my hands
.
I smiled against his neck as I stroked my fingers from his waist to his shoulders.
So do you
.
His long hair trailed across my face as he moved his mouth along the line of my jaw and down my throat.
I can feel your desire. I can see it
. He lifted his head, long enough to kiss me again, opening my mouth, gliding his tongue against mine.
I can taste it
. He left my lips tingling and moved lower.
Intense need knotted inside me as I wriggled under him and tried to close the little gaps between our skins. I could feel his erection nestled almost exactly where I needed him, and lifted my hips from the mattress to urge him in.
Duncan
…
He used the flat of his tongue on my breasts, stopping some of the ache.
You like this
.
I’d like more
. I cradled him with my thighs, but he kept holding back. It seemed like forever since the last time I’d felt him inside me. I dug my fingernails into his shoulders.
Don’t tease me
.
His touch changed as he took me by the wrists and pulled me up until we were both sitting up, with me straddling his lap. He held me suspended by the arms, his hands bruising.
Do you still want more
?
Occasionally, we got a little rough with each other, but not like this.
Thanks, but I think I’ll take a rain check
. I tried to free myself, but he wasn’t letting go. At the same time, I realized that although we were linked, I couldn’t feel a single emotion coming from him.
Duncan
?
If you love me, you’ll say you want more.
I didn’t like being manhandled, but I was no coward.
Okay. More
.
He reached under the pillow and pulled out something that he held against my neck. It was cold, thin, and sharp.
Don’t worry
. He pressed it in, and warm blood flowed down my neck.
You’ll heal. You
always heal
.
Marel appeared by the side of the sleeping platform. “Daddy?”
I jerked my head back, and fought to free my hands.
No, Duncan, don’t
! The blade in his hand glinted as he lifted it over my head.
Stop it
! Afraid he wouldn’t, I looked at my daughter.
Marel, get out of here
!
She smiled at me. “Everybody afraid of Mama bud Daddy.”
Reever
. I looked wildly up at him.
Don’t do this in front of our baby
.
Why not? You won’t die. You’ll never die. So I can keep killing you
-he stabbed me in the chest-
and killing you
-he yanked the knife out-
over and over and over and
“Cherijo.”
I screamed and threw my hands up over my face.
“
Cherijo
.”