GIFTS FROM A DEAD RACE
Part 2 of 2
Nik Morton
****
An arm round the old woman's
throat, folds of wobbling flesh overlapping his hand, her breath foul in his
nostrils, cloying, mixing with body odour. Her damned terrier snarled and snapped
at his heels. And she was very much alive, struggling with verve. 'Come on,
Paula! For God's sake, where's-?'
Paula
clamped the anaesthetic over nose and mouth and the wrestling slackened then
stopped. The woman was now a dead weight in his arms. The dog sensed the change
and backed off, mewling, confused, and suddenly afraid.
They
glanced up and down the street. Ill-lit and deserted. They dragged their
unwilling patient across the pavement to the waiting ambulance. They all
shuffled up the steps and into the back. Paula shut the doors and Rawlings
shouted, 'Right, Lindman, get moving!' And he knelt down to check the old
woman's breathing and blood-pressure. They christened her Old Minerva, in the
superstitious hope that that goddess of the arts and sciences was looking
favourably upon them.
****
Beneath the Basement Operating
Theatre's glaring hot lights, Rachel lay cold and naked, lifeless and almost
boneless.
Rawlings
pulled his eyes away but could not shake off the memories of their marriage. He
looked across at Old Minerva's comatose figure, his throat dry. 'Let's hope the
old woman's sacrifice will be worth it.'
This
was no longer Rachel, he told himself. Perversely, though he had the choice of
corpses, he had picked hers; to give her death some meaning, to be useful,
saving life even from the grave? He made deep incisions with the argon-laser
knife, the focused beam sealing off blood vessels as it cut.
All
of Rachel's organs and their secretions were analysed and checked. Towards the
end, he had to let Paula take over.
Eleven
aching, tiring hours passed. Effectively, they were sealed off from upstairs
and the outside world. The result of the autopsy on Rachel Rawlings was now on
reams of continuous printout paper, recordings, tabulations and computer-drawn
graphs.
'We'll
take a break,' he said, feeding more information into the comparative
physiology computer. 'I'll set the alarm for four hours' time. Okay?' Nobody
disagreed. 'Then we'll start on Old Minerva.'
He
woke with a splitting headache, stiffness in his shoulder and a leathery mouth.
'The humming's stopped?'
Lindman
spoke. 'I think the hospital's shut down, Doctor...'
The
ceiling-to-floor ventilation was off. He jabbed a light-switch, the tube
flickered into brilliant whiteness. At least the standby generators were
working...
'I
switched over an hour ago, but let you all sleep.' Paula added, correctly
interpreting his concern, 'Old Minerva is all right.'
'How
do you all feel?'
They
smiled, but he didn't miss the purple-rimmed eyes. 'Thermograph's warmed up and
ready,' Mosely said.
'Good.'
As the heat camera measured the old woman's infra-red glow, translating the
temperature distribution symmetry on a view-screen in varied colours, Rawlings
asked Sister Summers, 'How'd the x-rays come out?'
'Negative,
Doctor. A couple of hairline fractures, self-healed. Nothing else.'
'Nothing
here, either,' Paula said, checking the thermograph.
Rawlings
sighed. 'Let's open her up, then.'
****
Lindman handed over another
scalpel as the electricity from the Grid returned; the ceiling-to-floor
ventilation now gusted like an arctic wind, splashing blood everywhere.
'Mosely, can't you turn the damned thing off?' Rawlings snapped, bracing
himself as he performed an awkward excision.
'I'll
try...' Leaving the anaesthetic trolley, she twiddled the theatre console. The
airflow decreased to a reasonable down-draught, but now piped music - used as
an anaesthetic for low-pain operations - surged in, deafening. Mozart's Jupiter
suite. Distraught, Mosely ripped out the wires and the muzak stopped abruptly.
In
the strange silence of snapped tapes, they repeated all the tests they had done
on Rachel. A nagging fear was that the disease began in the bones; if so, then
they were stymied, for the computer analysis Sister Summers produced revealed
there had been nothing organically wrong with Rachel - except that her bones
had turned to powder.
Rawlings
suddenly grinned. 'Well, well. Look - a real appendix!'
Disinterestedly,
Paula looked. 'So what?'
'Remember
our argument? If you're practising medicine in 20 years time,' he said, poking
at it, 'you'll be lucky to see one of these perishers then!'
'I
suppose so,' Paula conceded, yawning.
The
appendix poked back at his scalpel.
'More
light, Sister!'
As
the lamps were hydraulically lowered, he watched, scrutinising one single
section of the vermiform appendage. Fibrous tissue glowed red. But he never
blinked; he out-stared it. The appendix moved.
'It's
alive, for God's sake - look!'
'I
am,' Paula answered in a hushed voice. She shook her head, disbelieving. 'But
it - it's supposed to be dead - defunct three million years! It can't be
functioning...'
'Quick,
we'll take some samples, analyse...' He was trembling, fearful lest his
imagination was running away with the exhaustion.
All
the old woman's organs were functioning correctly - and he grudgingly thanked
the modern medicine for that. Extensive tests empirically showed that the
appendix was no longer defunct but secreting some kind of natural vaccine.
Though there was no way of knowing, it seemed probable that the secretion had
been triggered by the infection itself.
'Check
Rachel's records, Sister,' said Paula.
'There's
no need,' he interrupted. 'She's got an appendectomy scar. Negative
appendix...'
Paula's
tired eyes glistened with tears. 'I think - you were right...'
He
couldn't swallow, staring down at the silly little worm-shape. He recalled his
words at the outset - something about God not being able to help...
For
millions of years, it had been lying there, dormant not dead, apparently
useless, just waiting for such an eventuality as this terrible plague from
space. Fanciful, of course, flavoured with exhaustion and emotion.
Instinctively, he felt his abdomen. At least he had managed to keep his own appendix
intact, more by accident than by design. Could the new-born of the last three
decades say the same? No. Many were doomed to die. Unless...
Voice
tremulous, Paula said, 'We must isolate Old Minerva's appendix secretion.'
He
wondered about her appendix then, hurriedly, added, 'If not, we'll use some of
mine. We've got to devise a broad-spectrum antidote.'
****
In the high-streets of the
affected world those who had avoided the pandemic space-virus began looting.
Military curfews commenced on the evening that Rawlings and Paula isolated the
vaccine, identifying its molecular structure so that it could be manufactured.
The
crash of the ground-floor window jerked his head round, cricked his stiff neck.
'I'll
see what's happening,' Lindman offered.
For
four isolated days without let-up, injecting adrenalin and Benzedrine
derivatives, he had kept going. Now, with the phial of artificial vaccine by
his side, he was close to tears and mental collapse. Hoarsely, he kept saying,
'We did it, Paula - we did it!'
But
she did not answer, was too intent on the doorway. She let out an involuntary
gasp, and gripped his shoulder.
Three
armed paramilitary men stood there, one gripping Lindman who was sobbing; her
skirt and blouse were torn.
Tiredly,
Rawlings stared, wondering what was happening. 'Who - who are you?' he asked
weakly.
'You're
quite cosy here, mate, with all these women, eh?' growled the unshaven leader,
his feral eyes glinting. 'In fact,' he spat on the floor, 'you're so sure of
yourself, maybe you know something about this plague.' He turned to his mates.
'I reckon I heard you say you did it.'
'You're
mistaken,' Paula said icily, walking towards them. 'Doctor Rawlings has found-'
The
leader's SLR butt crunched into her jaw, sent her reeling into the bench.
One
of the soldiers cheered.
Still
not fully comprehending, his euphoria at their success still hazing his
thoughts, Rawlings stepped forward. Something was wrong, terribly wrong. Paula
was hurt. Why? 'Paula?' he croaked. And as he manhandled the surprised leader
out of the way so he could attend to Paula, bullets punched into him, jerking
him into blackness, into oblivion.
Blood
coursed from his ears. Ears that were deaf to the screams of Lindman and
Mosely.
Sister
Summers fought in vain while Paula retched in a corner, painfully supporting
her broken jaw with bloody hands.
Forgotten,
the phial stood in a rack on the anaesthetic trolley.
* * * * *
Originally published
in Auguries magazine, 1984.
Copyright Nik Morton,
2015
GIFTS FROM A DEAD RACE started life as an explanation for the appendix and was first written
as a sexier and longer version and was accepted for publication in MEN ONLY, but due to editorial staff changes it never
saw the light of day until featured in AUGURIES in this
much tamer offering.
***
If
you enjoyed this story, you might like my collection of crime tales, Spanish Eye, published by Crooked Cat
(2013), which features 22 cases from Leon Cazador, private eye, ‘in his own
words’. He is also featured in the story
‘Processionary Penitents’ in the Crooked Cat Collection of twenty tales, Crooked Cats’ Tales.
Spanish Eye, released by Crooked Cat Publishing is available as a paperback and as
an e-book.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Spanish-Eye-Nik-Morton/dp/1909841315/ref=tmm_pap_title_0?ie=UTF8&qid=1399383023&sr=1-4
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Spanish-Eye-Nik-Morton-ebook/dp/B00GXK5C6S/ref=sr_1_4?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1399383023&sr=1-4&keywords=nik+morton
http://www.amazon.com/Spanish-Eye-Nik-Morton-ebook/dp/B00GXK5C6S/ref=sr_1_5?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1399382967&sr=1-5&keywords=nik+morton
Or you could try my
co-authored fantasy novel
Wings of the Overlord (by Morton Faulkner) currently available in hardback (5 good
glowing reviews):
Floreskand, where
myth, mystery and magic reign. The sky above the city of Lornwater darkens as
thousands of red tellars, the magnificent birds of the Overlord, wing their way
towards dark Arisa. Inexplicably drawn to discover why, the innman Ulran sets out
on a quest. Although he prefers to travel alone, he accedes to being
accompanied by the ascetic Cobrora Fhord, who seems to harbour a secret or two.
Before long, they realise that it's a race against time: they must get to Arisa
within seventy days and unlock the secret of the scheduled magical rites. On
their way, they stay at the ghostly inn on the shores of dreaded Lake and meet
up with the mighty warrior Courdour Alomar. Alomar has his own reasons for
going to Arisa and thus is forged an unlikely alliance. Gradually, the trio
learn more about each other -- whether it's the strange link Ulran has with the
red tellar Scalrin, the lost love of Alomar, or the superstitious heart of
Cobrora. Plagued by assassins, forces of nature and magic, the ill-matched threesome
must follow their fate across the plains of Floreskand, combat the Baronculer
hordes, scale the snow-clad Sonalume Mountains and penetrate the dark heart of
Arisa. Only here will they uncover the truth. Here too they will find pain and
death in their struggle against the evil Yip-nef Dom.