"That's right."
"We put superskin on. We wait. It's a life-form, you know. Human genes trimmed in some lab in Sol system to make it a universal donor. Wonderful stuff." Now she looked up at him. "We wait. It attaches itself. Eventually the patient gets up and goes home. There are old guys walking around with superskin faces and hands. Women too. You can just barely tell."
He knew her. Narrow head, narrow nose, yellow-brown skin, and Oriental eyes: handsome, but an impatient, angry woman.
He couldn't quite remember, and he couldn't just stare. "I know you've got her on drugs. Is she in a lot of pain?"
"Would be. She's taking Novabliss. With that in her she's happier than you are." Her eyes widened in shock. "No birdfucking allowed!"
Oh.
There being nowhere to run, he said, "It's the law."
"I didn't know you till you smiled. Jeremy... Jemmy."
"How's Dolores?"
"Died."
"Damn!"
"I got pregnant. A man killed her after I wasn't there to protect her."
"Anyone I know?"
"No. I'll know him. Everyone comes to Medical sooner or later. Winslow, like Barda? Married Barda's... sister?"
"Right."
"Clever. Jeremy, anyone could find out I served time in the Windfarm, but I don't call attention to it."
"Sounds good to me."
She was still studying him. "That's right, you're a Crab shy! How on Earth did you get here at all? Fake records. What's with the knee?"
He told her. She nodded, nodded, used her keyboard. "Okay, it says you're real, and your credit is midlevel. You can buy dinner but not a restaurant."
"Can I go to the library?"
"The computers see you as a surgery patient. You can use the library while you wait for a doctor. I'll take you away from Brendan, and I can't fit you in for... is six hours enough? Then I'll look you over and we can talk."
Lisa Schiavo was on duty in Reception and Recovery. Jeremy watched her for a bit. "Got your computer back?"
"Winslow. How's, ah, Karen?"
"Dr. Nogales won't make any promises."
"She's good that way. I mean, I'm sorry it's bad news, but Nogales won't lie. How's the knee?"
"Dr. Nogaies wants to look it over later today. Doctor, is everyone here a doctor? Aren't there any nurses or aides or-?"
"Doctor means you're doing something to run a hospital. It's courtesy. Like in a restaurant, saying Herr'ober gets you someone who can bring you food or clean your table? It used to mean headwaiter. But patients get put on diets, so even the commissary chefs are doctors-Winslow, I've got to work."
"I'd like to wait in the library if you're not using it."
"Log on with your credit ident. Doctors get priority."
Up three floors. Lines of office doors along a corridor, all labeled, all closed. At the end of the hall, an open door.
LIBRARY
He found a dozen comfortable chairs and five screens. One wasn't working. Four were in use. One user looked wasted: his eyes had a glassy look. Patient. Three looked healthy and busy: doctors.
Jeremy sat down and waited placidly. He'd waited twenty-seven years.
The patient nodded off; rapped his forehead on the keyboard, jerked up to see gibberish. Staggered upright and went away.
Jeremy took his place. As his fingertips touched the keyboard, Jeremy's eyes stung with tears, abruptly, unexpectedly. The home he'd lost again and again was his at last. He was back in Spiral Town, eight years old again, and it was time for school.
All right. There were things he'd always wondered about. The teaching programs never had enough to satisfy him.
CRAB
There were hundreds of Earthlife varieties. Jeremy could pick one or two that resembled the Crab Peninsula.
OTTER
Earthlife: a mammal, streamlined, with bristly hair. It looked nothing at all like Otterfolk.
OTTERFOLK
Kismet tegumentum lutrahomines, the first intelligent species ever found off Earth.
Otterfolk were curious about humans.
Cavorite's crew loved that. They ran their Road well above Otterfolk beaches for fear that those who came after would meddle. Jeremy found references to species gone extinct because they attracted human attention. But they'd done some meddling themselves.
They'd taught the Otterfolk how to cultivate Earthlife fish and crustacea, and traded them simple tools for fish. That was a success.
They'd set up a cooperative exploring team.
Reference:
OTTERFOLK*EXPLORE*CLIFF SIDE
OTTERFOLK*EXPLORE*BEACHE S
The Otterfolk enjoy boat rides. We want to try a mixed crew. Arundez has designed a suitable boat, a catamaran with nets we can drop to block off the central well so that otterfolk can swim during a voyage...
They'd gone exploring together, along the coast and off the back side of the Crab, above and beneath the sea.
Destiny sunlight, reddened and deficient in ultraviolet, still caused skin cancers and blindness in Otterfolk.
Sea life outside Haunted Bay poisoned them. Or attacked them: there were predators worse than lungsharks.
In unfamiliar currents they followed the wrong smells and got lost.
Lower salinity hurt their skins and made them vulnerable to parasites.
To avoid bringing back a nasty skin parasite, the contact crew had euthanized ten Otterfolk and burned the boat.
EUTHANIZE
Kill.
It bothered Jeremy, but the Biology crew had been horrified. Not just the guilt, not just the deaths. An intelligent species that couldn't explore! To men and women who had conquered space- And seen space ripped from their grasp- That was obscene.
He flinched from the next entry- KAREN WINSLOW
Patient records are restricted. Access code?
-relaxed, and tried- ARGOS
Familiar stuff.
Half a thousand colonists had left Sol system in cold sleep, with twenty crew.
Cold-sleep techniques were two hundred years advanced beyond Avalon's time, but the major advances were diagnostic. Colonists damaged by cranial ice crystals would be, ah, euthanized. A crew member wakened during the voyage must remain thawed.
Far too many were damaged. Three hundred and sixty-six sleepers arrived, and seventy crew. Fifty sleepers chosen for skills learned in deep space had been revived to deal with an emergency.
Most of the fifty had lived their lives off Earth. They'd grown up using the resources of an entire solar system. They had flown Argos across light-years to a system yet untouched. Asteroid and gas-giant mining techniques were centuries old. Their faith was in Argos and their own skills.
They'd expected the colony on Destiny to fail. Destiny's ecology, after all, would have its own agenda.
On arrival, they mutinied.
ARGOS*MUTINY*TRIAL
The facts weren't in dispute. A trial hadn't struck him as silly when he was a boy. Base One's tribunal had found them guilty, and so what? By then the mutineers were elsewhere in the solar system. Their judges were marooned, owning two landers and whatever gear had been judged useless by an exoplanetary community. They were barely able to reach orbit.
ARGOS*DEBRIEF
He'd been through these too: memoirs by crew who chose to remain
with the Destiny colony. Wait, these files had more bulk than Base One's memoirs. It must include material written after Cavorite's departure. Try ARGOS*MEMOIRS*TWERDAHL
Restricted material. Access code? No birdfucking allowed.
ARGOS*SIGHTINGS
Ye gods! Destiny Town had an orbiting telescope!
The Cyclops telescope had gone up a hundred and ninety-one years ago. First sighting of Argos came ten years later; first verified sighting, eleven years. Argos's drive flame was not bright; Argos without it was invisible. But the Argos drive flame impacting an asteroid was brilliant and unmistakable... for whatever that was worth. Destiny Town could only watch. Cavorite could reach geosynchronous orbit, but not the moons, not the planets, not the stars.