GIFTS FROM A DEAD RACE
Part 1 of 2
Nik Morton
Projected behind the newsreader
was a picture of Earth, the sun, and a red-arrowed elliptical line. 'And it is
believed to be travelling at eighty miles a second and should bypass Earth
close indeed, about five million miles away. First spotted by a Peruvian
astronomer, Santiago Almeida, as a smudge on a telescopic film...'
Rawlings
fingered the switch-off button and snuggled down in bed beside his wife Rachel.
He smiled. She was already asleep. They'd both had a hard day at the hospital.
Gently he kissed her slightly parted full lips and snapped out the bedside
light.
****
Astronomers first became alarmed
when the Almeida meteorite approached the sun. The first glimmerings of a
comet-like tail were released, charged gases and particles streaming in the
solar wind.
It
was impossible to tell from Earth, but near the meteorite's surface some
unimaginably powerful fissionable material from a dead race had reacted to the
sun's proximity, exploding on its far side.
Almeida
altered course...
****
'What were you arguing about with
Paula Mayfield today, love?' Rachel wanted to know as they nestled close in
bed, only half-watching the late-night movie.
'Oh,
the usual - my pet annoyance...'
She
rose on one elbow to look down on him. Her grey-flecked blue eyes were earnest,
framed by auburn hair that gladly hung free after the constriction of the day
in hospital. 'We're living in the dawn of the 22nd century - we must move with
the times.'
He
kissed her lightly, sighed, his grey eyes dulled by grim thoughts. 'I know. The
days of pollution are past, we live in the Recycled Age! Buildings, transport,
the oceans, even people - all becoming scrupulously clean.'
'Well,
yes... That's the idea. Looking after Spaceship Earth.'
He
pulled back the sheet and smiled - an impish grin, she'd called it on their
honeymoon: 'Like a leprechaun.'
She
ruffled his thinning black hair. 'You don't convince me of your subversive
views this way, you know.'
'True,
but it's fun trying...'
****
Food was bacteria-free. This was
the hydrogen age; every nuclear plant had been shut down over the last two
decades and the nuclear waste rocketed into the sun. The population explosion
seemed stemmed. First had come world-wide fluoridation; it ruined the teeth in
sixty years, but by then you were ready for dentures anyway. Next, the
introduction of birth-control agents in the water supplies: a family unit must
have no more than two children; if they were permitted to have children, a pill
was issued on prescription to dissolve in water, nullifying the
birth-controlling properties.
****
Almeida was heading for
mid-Atlantic. Computer-predictions calculated that the population in its path
would not amount to estimated losses due to radioactive fallout so, with some
relief, fingers poised on the nuclear rocket buttons edged back. The world
watched.
Still
travelling at thousands of miles per hour, Almeida singed the tree tops around
Salisbury Plain and on impact obliterated Stonehenge and nearby Winterbourne
Stoke. The tremors toppled Amesbury Abbey onto mid-afternoon shoppers and
traffic.
Turf
and bedrock layers were peeled back like flower-petals with the shattering
explosion, leaving a 50ft deep crater, half a mile wide. As the spectacular
cloud fountained high into the air, seismographs around the world recorded the
upheaval. Within minutes, helicopter rescue teams lifted off from the tarmac of
the RAF experimental base at Boscombe Down.
****
Afterwards, she said, 'I'm still
not convinced.'
Now,
he looked serious. 'I'm a little deflated at your response...'
She
laughed and hastily confirmed the truth of this.
Undeterred,
he said, 'Do you remember in training, reading about the rape of the phallus?'
'Circumcision.
Yes. Something about it being almost an obsession with American doctors in the
middle of last century?'
'Yes.
Well, we've extrapolated on that since, haven't we?'
'Why
not? An excision made on babies today is merely removing unwanted, useless and
often troublesome organs. Vestigial-'
'That's
the problem. We've become so clean-conscious, so bloody function-minded, so
anything that could cause trouble is removed and discarded. Dissidents,
criminals, foreskins - ouch!' She had tweaked his. 'Appendices, extra toes,
supernumerary nipples - you name it, and we'll get rid of it!'
'And
I'll now get rid of this...' She leaned forward, her hair stroking him.
****
Steaming and hissing, the
countless pieces of Almeida strewn around the area of devastation spewed out
microscopic spores.
The
pernicious virus soared into the air, mingling with clouds and winds.
****
Their bleepers interrupted with
urgency.
Swinging
out of bed, Rawlings jabbed the transceiver on the cabinet: the receptionist
said in a high-pitched voice: 'General recall, Doctor. A rush on - emergency
admittances. Some weird epidemic...'
Rachel
groaned under the covers. 'We'll be there in ten minutes, Nurse,' he said.
'Thank you.'
Reception's
computerised admission system was overloaded. Young nurses and auxiliaries were
purposefully scurrying everywhere. Porters with trolleys filled the foyer.
Admissions
reported agonising pains in their joints; shortly afterwards, multiple complex
fractures would result as the rigidity of the bones broke down. Within a very
short time, the bones turned to powder. Death through lack of skeletal
support...
'God!'
Rachel said, turning away from the patients.
Savagely,
Rawlings snapped, 'He won't help us!' and pulled her with him to his
soundproofed office.
After
a reviving wash, he contacted Central Hospital: they might have more to go on.
Rachel had been sick in the basin and was now recovering, wiping her drawn
face. Cupping the phone, he asked, 'Feeling better?' She nodded, ashen-faced.
She looked as bad as he felt.
Central
reported no clues. Their report made him shudder. 'Yes, all we can do is scoop
up the remains, get ready for the next lot,' he said then hung up.
At
that moment Rachel's bleeper sounded. A look almost of relief passed across her
face. 'I'll get down to surgery,' she said hoarsely.
'Right,
love - take care.'
Alone,
he scoured his memory for any military establishment experimenting with
bio-chemical warfare agents. None. A derailed chemical shipment - perhaps
radioactive? Another Seveso incident, a Bhopal leak? It seemed too far-fetched,
though, even if isotopes did affect the bone-structure. Nothing acted that
fast. Besides, there was so little radioactive stuff around these days, unlike
last century when they say you didn't know where you'd trip over it.
Suddenly
he went very cold. A Chinese biological attack? But the government would alert
everyone, wouldn't they?
He
switched on the desk-viewer.
'...
nationwide reports of a mysterious debilitating disease. Health organisations
are on full alert, all off-duty staff are being recalled. The Prime Minister
has assured the nation that this is not - repeat, not - an enemy attack. There
is no reason to panic. Cricket at...'
Disillusioned,
he phoned reception. 'Nurse, this is Dr P Rawlings. Has the Principal arrived
yet?'
'No,
Doctor. Mr Scannura phoned in about ten minutes ago, he's trapped in a
traffic-jam on his way here. He was trying to get a police helicopter to life
him, the last I heard.'
'I
see. Thank you. Can you get Doctor Mayfield, please? How many doctors have -
only four? Oh... Yes, I'm taking over till the Principal gets here, then. Oh,
and what are you telling callers? Right, keep it low-key, there's enough panic
as it is... Well done.' Thank God we're not at Central.
As
he waited for Paula Mayfield, he watched the latest news-flash. The truth was
percolating through. The northern hemisphere, including Russia and China, had
been affected. The graphics displayed a purple plume swathing from southern
England across Europe and Asia. The meteor was to blame. Yet, perversely,
commentators observed that there was no wholesale infection; it was strangely
selective: mostly the younger people succumbed. Most of the more vulnerable
elderly people were unaffected.
'You
wanted to see me?' Paula's freckled face was sickly pale, in stark contrast to
her flaming red hair.
'Yes.'
He wiped a paper handkerchief across his weary face, dried the fear-sweat from
his palms. 'Take a seat, Paula.' Face impassive, she perched on the chair's
edge, as if afraid to spill fragile emotions.
'I
think we'll have to go it alone, without Scannura.'
'Agreed.
We must attempt something - we all feel so helpless...'
The
view-screens lit up with the names of personnel who had made it to the
hospital. Disconcertingly, one or two names blinked out: victims...
'A
dual autopsy, then, one on a victim, another on a healthy old person, to
determine the difference.'
Paula's
eyes widened.
'Yes,
it's probably criminal - and it could take longer than we've got... But we have
no choice, have we?'
Hands
tight-clenched in her lap, she lowered her eyes and nodded.
'Naturally,
we'll try keeping a lid on it.' He scanned the list. 'We can trust Nurses
Mosely and Lindman and Sister Summers. I daren't take any other doctor. We'll
meet in Basement Theatre, seal it off, if-'
The
door swung wide, no knock, no explanation.
'What
is it, Nurse Lindman?' he snapped.
Lindman's
Jamaican skin was almost bloodless, large attractive eyes awash.
'What
is the matter, Molly? Paula asked more gently.
'It's
Doctor Rawlings, Mrs Rachel-'
****
He felt devoid of feeling. He had
seen too many grotesque corpses in too short a time to feel anything but numb.
His wife was like all the others. The blood in his body pounded, which seemed
strange, for he felt sure that he no longer had a heart. He felt empty.
Memories of their moments of tenderness not so many hours ago kept replaying in
his mind, brutally superimposed by the sight of her now. He turned away, said
gruffly to Paula, 'We've got one body, then...'
But
finding a live guinea-pig would prove more difficult.
To be concluded tomorrow…
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