The air officer also told him about the reason for the turning off of the interplanetary drive. He considered it a very curious happening.
The doctor left the air room and passed the place where the little girl—the last passenger to board the Star Queen—waited patiently for somebody to arrange something. Doctor Nordenfeld took a lift to the fourth level and went into the bar where Jensen should be waiting.
He was. He had an empty glass before him. Nordenfeld sat down and dialed for a drink. He had an indefinite feeling that something was wrong, but he couldn’t put his finger on it. There are always things going wrong for a ship’s doctor, though. There are so many demands on his patience that he is usually short of it.
Jensen watched him sip at his drink.
“A bad day?” he asked. He’d gotten over his own tension.
Nordenfeld shrugged, but his scowl deepened. “There are a lot of new passengers.” He realized that he was trying to explain his feelings to himself. “They’ll come to me feeling miserable. I have to tell each one that if they feel heavy and depressed, it may be the gravity-constant of the ship, which is greater than their home planet. If they feel light-headed and giddy, it may be because the gravity-constant of the ship is less than they’re used to. But it doesn’t make them feel better, so they come back for a second assurance. I’ll be overwhelmed with such complaints within two hours.”
Jensen waited. Then he said casually—too casually, “Does anybody ever suspect chlorophage?”
“No,” said Nordenfeld shortly.
Jensen fidgeted. He sipped. Then he said, “What’s the news from Kamerun, anyhow?”
“There isn’t any,” said Nordenfeld. “Naturally! Why ask?”
“I just wondered,” said Jensen. After a moment: “What was the last news?”
“There hasn’t been a message from Kamerun in two years,” said Nordenfeld curtly. “There’s no sign of anything green anywhere on the planet. It’s considered to be—uninhabited.”
Jensen licked his lips. “That’s what I understood. Yes.”
Nordenfeld drank half his drink and said unpleasantly, “There were thirty million people on Kamerun when the chlorophage appeared. At first it was apparently a virus which fed on the chlorophyll of plants. They died. Then it was discovered that it could also feed on hemoglobin, which is chemically close to chlorophyll. Hemoglobin is the red coloring matter of the blood. When the virus consumed it, people began to die. Kamerun doctors found that the chlorophage virus was transmitted by contact, by inhalation, by ingestion. It traveled as dust particles and on the feet of insects, and it was in drinking water and the air one breathed. The doctors on Kamerun warned spaceships off and the Patrol put a quarantine fleet in orbit around it to keep anybody from leaving. And nobody left. And everybody died. And so did every living thing that had chlorophyll in its leaves or hemoglobin in its blood, or that needed plant or animal tissues to feed on. There’s not a person left alive on Kamerun, nor an animal or bird or insect, nor a fish nor a tree, or plant or weed or blade of grass. There’s no longer a quarantine fleet there. Nobody’ll go there and there’s nobody left to leave. But there are beacon satellites to record any calls and to warn any fool against landing. If the chlorophage got loose and was carried about by spaceships, it could kill the other forty billion humans in the galaxy, together with every green plant or animal with hemoglobin in its blood.”
“That,” said Jensen, and tried to smile, “sounds final.”
“It isn’t,” Nordenfeld told him. “If there’s something in the universe which can kill every living thing except its maker, that something should be killed. There should be research going on about the chlorophage. It would be deadly dangerous work, but it should be done. A quarantine won’t stop contagion. It can only hinder it. That’s useful, but not enough.”
Jensen moistened his lips.
Nordenfeld said abruptly, “I’ve answered your questions. Now what’s on your mind and what has it to do with chlorophage?”
Jensen started. He went very pale.
“It’s too late to do anything about it,” said Nordenfeld. “It’s probably nonsense anyhow. But what is it?”
Jensen stammered out his story. It explained why there were so many passengers for the Star Queen. It even explained his departure from Altaira. But it was only a rumor—the kind of rumor that starts up untraceably and can never be verified. This one was officially denied by the Altairan planetary government. But it was widely believed by the sort of people who usually were well-informed. Those who could sent their families up to the Star Queen. And that was why Jensen had been tense and worried until the liner had actually left Altaira behind. Then he felt safe.
Nordenfeld’s jaw set as Jensen told his tale. He made no comment, but when Jensen was through he nodded and went away, leaving his drink unfinished. Jensen couldn’t see his face; it was hard as granite.
And Nordenfeld, the ship’s doctor of the Star Queen, went into the nearest bathroom and was violently sick. It was a reaction to what he’d just learned.
* * * *
There were stars which were so far away that their distance didn’t mean anything. There were planets beyond counting in a single star cluster, let alone the galaxy. There were comets and gas clouds in space, and worlds where there was life, and other worlds where life was impossible. The quantity of matter which was associated with life was infinitesimal, and the quantity associated with consciousness—animal life—was so much less that the difference couldn’t be expressed. But the amount of animal life which could reason was so minute by comparison that the nearest ratio would be that of a single atom to a sun. Mankind, in fact, was the least impressive fraction of the smallest category of substance in the galaxy.
But men did curious things.
There was the cutting off of the Star Queen’s short-distance drive before she’d gotten well away from Altaira. There had been a lift-ship locked to the liner’s passenger airlock. When the last passenger entered the big ship—a little girl—the airlocks disconnected and the lift-ship pulled swiftly away.
It was not quite two miles from the Star Queen when its emergency airlocks opened and spacesuited figures plunged out of it to emptiness. Simultaneously, the ports of the lift-ship glowed and almost immediately the whole plating turned cherry-red, crimson, and then orange, from unlimited heat developed within it.
The lift-ship went incandescent and ruptured and there was a spout of white-hot air, and then it turned blue-white and puffed itself to nothing in metallic steam. Where it had been there was only shining gas, which cooled. Beyond it there were figures in spacesuits which tried to swim away from it.
The Star Queen’s control room, obviously, saw the happening. The lift-ship’s atomic pile had flared out of control and melted down the ship. It had developed something like sixty thousand degrees Fahrenheit when it ceased to flare. It did not blow up; it only vaporized. But the process must have begun within seconds after the lift-ship broke contact with the Star Queen.
In automatic reaction, the man in control of the liner cut her drive and offered to turn back and pick up the spacesuited figures in emptiness. The offer was declined with almost hysterical haste. In fact, it was barely made before the other lift-ships moved in on rescue missions. They had waited. And they were picking up castaways before the Star Queen resumed its merely interplanetary drive and the process of aiming for a solar system some thirty light-years away.
When the liner flicked into overdrive, more than half the floating figures had been recovered, which was remarkable. It was almost as remarkable as the flare-up of the lift-ship’s atomic pile. One has to know exactly what to do to make a properly designed atomic pile vaporize metal. Somebody had known. Somebody had done it. And the other lift-ships were waiting to pick up the destroyed lift-ship’s crew when it happened.
The matter of the lift-ship’s destruction was fresh in Nordenfeld’s mind when Jensen had told his story. The two items fitted together with an appall
ing completeness. They left little doubt or hope.
* * * *
Nordenfeld consulted the passenger records and presently was engaged in conversation with the sober-faced, composed little girl on a sofa in one of the cabin levels of the Star Queen.
“You’re Kathy Brand, I believe,” he said matter-of-factly. “I understand you’ve been having a rather bad time of it.”
She seemed to consider.
“It hasn’t been too bad,” she assured him. “At least I’ve been seeing new things. I got dreadfully tired of seeing the same things all the time.”
“What things?” asked Nordenfeld. His expression was not stern now, though his inner sensations were not pleasant. He needed to talk to this child, and he had learned how to talk to children. The secret is to talk exactly as to an adult, with respect and interest.
“There weren’t any windows,” she explained, “and my father couldn’t play with me, and all the toys and books were ruined by the water. It was dreadfully tedious. There weren’t any other children, you see. And presently there weren’t any grownups but my father.”
Nordenfeld only looked more interested. He’d been almost sure ever since knowing of the lift-ship’s destruction and listening to Jensen’s account of the rumor the government of Altaira denied. He was horribly sure now.
“How long were you in the place that hadn’t any windows?”
“Oh, dreadfully long!” she said. “Since I was only six years old! Almost half my life!” She smiled brightly at him. “I remember looking out of windows and even playing out-of-doors, but my father and mother said I had to live in this place. My father talked to me often and often. He was very nice. But he had to wear that funny suit and keep the glass over his face because he didn’t live in the room. The glass was because he went under the water, you know.”
Nordenfeld asked carefully conversational-sounding questions. Kathy Brand, now aged ten, had been taken by her father to live in a big room without any windows. It hadn’t any doors, either. There were plants in it, and there were bluish lights to shine on the plants, and there was a place in one corner where there was water. When her father came in to talk to her, he came up out of the water wearing the funny suit with glass over his face. He went out the same way. There was a place in the wall where she could look out into another room, and at first her mother used to come and smile at her through the glass, and she talked into something she held in her hand, and her voice came inside. But later she stopped coming.
There was only one possible kind of place which would answer Kathy’s description. When she was six years old she had been put into some university’s aseptic-environment room. And she had stayed there. Such rooms were designed for biological research. They were built and then made sterile of all bacterial life and afterward entered through a tank of antiseptic. Anyone who entered wore a suit which was made germ-free by its passage through the antiseptic, and he did not breathe the air of the aseptic room, but air which was supplied him through a hose, the exhaled-air hose also passing under the antiseptic outside. No germ or microbe or virus could possibly get into such a room without being bathed in corrosive fluid which would kill it. So long as there was someone alive outside to take care of her, a little girl could live there and defy even chlorophage.
And Kathy Brand had done it. But, on the other hand, Kamerun was the only planet where it would be necessary, and it was the only world from which a father would land his small daughter on another planet’s spaceport. There was no doubt. Nordenfeld grimly imagined someone—he would have had to be a microbiologist even to attempt it—fighting to survive and defeat the chlorophage while he kept his little girl in an aseptic-environment room.
She explained quite pleasantly as Nordenfeld asked more questions. There had been other people besides her father, but for a long time there had been only him. And Nordenfeld computed that somehow she’d been kept alive on the dead planet Kamerun for four long years.
Recently, though—very recently—her father told her that they were leaving. Wearing his funny, antiseptic-wetted suit, he’d enclosed her in a plastic bag with a tank attached to it. Air flowed from the tank into the bag and out through a hose that was all wetted inside. She breathed quite comfortably.
It made sense. An air tank could be heated and its contents sterilized to supply germ-free—or virus-free—air. And Kathy’s father took an axe and chopped away a wall of the room. He picked her up, still inside the plastic bag, and carried her out. There was nobody about. There was no grass. There were no trees. Nothing moved.
Here Kathy’s account was vague, but Nordenfeld could guess at the strangeness of a dead planet, to the child who barely remembered anything but the walls of an aseptic-environment room.
Her father carried her to a little ship, said Kathy, and they talked a lot after the ship took off. He told her that he was taking her to a place where she could run about outdoors and play, but he had to go somewhere else. He did mysterious things which to Nordenfeld meant a most scrupulous decontamination of a small spaceship’s interior and its airlock. Its outer surface would reach a temperature at which no organic material could remain uncooked.
And finally, said Kathy, her father had opened a door and told her to step out and good-by, and she did, and the ship went away—her father still wearing his funny suit—and people came and asked her questions she did not understand.
* * * *
Kathy’s narrative fitted perfectly into the rumor Jensen said circulated among usually well-informed people on Altaira. They believed, said Jensen, that a small spaceship had appeared in the sky above Altaira’s spaceport. It ignored all calls, landed swiftly, opened an airlock and let someone out, and plunged for the sky again. And the story said that radar telescopes immediately searched for and found the ship in space. They trailed it, calling vainly for it to identify itself, while it drove at top speed for Altaira’s sun.
It reached the sun and dived in.
Nordenfeld reached the skipper on intercom vision-phone. Jensen had been called there to repeat his tale to the skipper.
“I’ve talked to the child,” said Nordenfeld grimly, “and I’m putting her into isolation quarters in the hospital compartment. She’s from Kamerun. She was kept in an aseptic-environment room at some university or other. She says her father looked after her. I get an impression of a last-ditch fight by microbiologists against the chlorophage. They lost it. Apparently her father landed her on Altaira and dived into the sun. From her story, he took every possible precaution to keep her from contagion or carrying contagion with her to Altaira. Maybe he succeeded. There’s no way to tell—yet.”
The skipper listened in silence.
Jensen said thinly, “Then the story about the landing was true.”
“Yes. The authorities isolated her, and then shipped her off on the Star Queen. Your well-informed friends, Jensen, didn’t know what their government was going to do!” Nordenfeld paused, and said more coldly still, “They didn’t handle it right. They should have killed her, painlessly but at once. Her body should have been immersed, with everything that had touched it, in full-strength nitric acid. The same acid should have saturated the place where the ship landed and every place she walked. Every room she entered, and every hall she passed through, should have been doused with nitric and then burned. It would still not have been all one could wish. The air she breathed couldn’t be recaptured and heated white-hot. But the chances for Altaira’s population to go on living would be improved. Instead, they isolated her and they shipped her off with us—and thought they were accomplishing something by destroying the lift-ship that had her in an airtight compartment until she walked into the Star Queen’s lock!”
The skipper said heavily, “Do you think she’s brought chlorophage on board?”
“I’ve no idea,” said Nordenfeld. “If she did, it’s too late to do anything but drive the Star Queen into the nearest sun…. No. Before that, one should give warning that she was aground on Altaira. No
ship should land there. No ship should take off. Altaira should be blocked off from the rest of the galaxy like Kamerun was. And to the same end result.”
Jensen said unsteadily; “There’ll be trouble if this is known on the ship. There’ll be some unwilling to sacrifice themselves.”
“Sacrifice?” said Nordenfeld. “They’re dead! But before they lie down, they can keep everybody they care about from dying too! Would you want to land and have your wife and family die of it?”
The skipper said in the same heavy voice, “What are the probabilities? You say there was an effort to keep her from contagion. What are the odds?”
“Bad,” said Nordenfeld. “The man tried, for the child’s sake. But I doubt he managed to make a completely aseptic transfer from the room she lived in to the spaceport on Altaira. The authorities on Altaira should have known it. They should have killed her and destroyed everything she’d touched. And still the odds would have been bad!”
Jensen said, “But you can’t do that, Nordenfeld! Not now!”
“I shall take every measure that seems likely to be useful.” Then Nordenfeld snapped, “Damnation, man! Do you realize that this chlorophage can wipe out the human race if it really gets loose? Do you think I’ll let sentiment keep me from doing what has to be done?”
He flicked off the vision-phone.
* * * *
The Star Queen came out of overdrive. Her skipper arranged it to be done at the time when the largest possible number of her passengers and crew would be asleep. Those who were awake, of course, felt the peculiar inaudible sensation which one subjectively translated into sound. They felt the momentary giddiness which—having no natural parallel—feels like the sensation of treading on a stair-step that isn’t there, combined with a twisting sensation so it is like a spiral fall. The passengers who were awake were mostly in the bars, and the bartenders explained that the ship had shifted overdrive generators and there was nothing to it.
Those who were asleep started awake, but there was nothing in their surroundings to cause alarm. Some blinked in the darkness of their cabins and perhaps turned on the cabin lights, but everything seemed normal. They turned off the lights again. Some babies cried and had to be soothed. But there was nothing except wakening to alarm anybody. Babies went back to sleep and mothers returned to their beds and—such awakenings being customary—went back to sleep also.
The Fourth Murray Leinster Page 2