He'll take on from me."
"You sure you know what the hell you're doing?"
"Strike a bleedin' light," Timsen said. "'Course I know. You got some water boiling?"
"No."
"Well, get some! Don't you Yanks know anything?"
"Keep your shirt on!"
The King nodded to Tex and Tex got the water going. Timsen undid the surgical haversack and laid out a little towel.
"I'll be goddamned," Tex said. "I ain't never seen something so clean before. Why, it's almost blue it's so white."
Timsen spat and washed his hands carefully with a new cake of soap and started to boil the hypodermic and forceps. Then he bent over Peter Marlowe and slapped his face a little.
"Hey, cobber!"
"Yes," Peter Marlowe said, weakly.
"I'm going to clean the wound, right?"
Peter Marlowe had to concentrate. "What?"
"I'm going to give you the hantitoxin —"
"I've got to get up to the hospital," he said drunkenly. "It's time now — cut it — I'm telling you —" His spirit left him once more.
"Just as well," Timsen said.
When the hypodermic was sterilized, Timsen gave an injection of morphine. "You help," he said brusquely to the King. "Keep the bloody sweat out of me eyes." Obediently the King got a towel.
Timsen waited until the injection reacted, then he ripped off the old bandage and laid the wound bare. "Jesus!" The whole wound area was puffy and purple and green. "I think it's too late."
"My God," the King said. "No wonder the poor son of a bitch was crazy."
Gritting his teeth, Timsen carefully cut away the worst of the rotted, putrid skin and probed deep and washed the wound as clean as he could. Then he sprinkled sulfa powder over it and neatly rebandaged it. When this was done, he straightened and sighed. "My bleedin' back!" He looked at the purity of the bandage, then turned to the King. "Got a piece of shirt?"
The King grabbed a shirt from the wall and gave it to him.
Timsen ripped the arm out and tore it into a rough bandage and wrapped it on top of the bandage.
"What the hell's that for?" the King asked Wearily.
"Camouflage," Timsen said. "I suppose you think he can walk around the camp with a nice new bandage on him and not get stopped by curious docs and MP's asking him where the hell he got it?"
"Oh, I see."
"Well now, that's something!"
The King let the crack pass. He was too qualmish with the memory of Peter Marlowe's arm and the smell of it and the blood and the clotted mucused bandage that lay on the floor. "Hey Tex, get rid of that stinking thing."
"Who, me? Why —"
"Get rid of it."
Tex reluctantly picked up the bandage and went outside. He kicked the soft earth away and buried it, and was sick. When he came back he said,
"Thank God I don't have to do this every day."
Timsen shakily filled the hypodermic and bent over Peter Marlowe's arm.
"You got to watch. Watch for Christ's sake," he growled as he saw the King turn away. "If Steven doesn't come, maybe you'll have to do it. The injection's got to be intravenous, right? You find the vein. Then you just stick the needle in and inch out a little until you can pull some blood into the syringe. See? Then you're sure the needle's in the vein. Once you're sure, you just squirt the hantitoxin in. But not fast. Take about three minutes for the cc."
The King watched, revolted, until the needle was jerked out and Timsen pressed a little piece of cotton wool over the puncture.
"Goddammit," the King said. "I'll never be able to do that."
"You want to let him die, okay." Timsen was sweating and nauseated too.
"An' my old man wanted me to be a doctor!" He pushed the King out of the way and put his head out of the window and was violently sick. "Get me some coffee for God's sake."
Peter Marlowe stirred and became half awake.
"You're going to be all right, cobber. You understand me?" Timsen bent over him, gentle.
Peter Marlowe nodded myopically and lifted his arm. For a moment he stared at it unbelievingly, then he muttered, "What happened? It's still on
— it's still on!"
"Of course it's on," the King said proudly. "We just fixed you up. Antitoxin, the lot. Me and Timsen!"
But Peter Marlowe only looked at him, his mouth working and no words coming out. Then at length, he said in a whisper, "It's still on." He used his right hand to feel the arm that should not be there but was. And when he was sure he was not dreaming, he lay back in a pool of sweat and closed his eyes and began to cry. A few minutes later he was asleep.
"Poor bugger," Timsen said. "He must've thought he was on the op table."
"How long's he going to be out?"
"About another couple of hours. Listen," Timsen said, "he's got to have an injection every six hours until the toxin's out of him. For, say, about forty-eight hours. And new dressings every day. And more sulfa. But you got to remember. He must keep up the injections. And don't be surprised if he vomits all over the place. There's bound to be a reaction. A bad one. I made the first dose heavy."
"You think he'll be all right?"
"I'll answer that in ten days." Timsen got the haversack together and made a neat little parcel of the towel, soap, hypodermic, antitoxin and sulfa powder. "Now let's settle up, right?"
The King took out the pack that Shagata had given him. "Smoke?"
"Ta."
When the cigarettes were lit the King said, matter of fact, "We can settle up when the diamond deal goes through."
"Oh no, mate. I delivers, I get paid. That's nothing to do with this," Timsen said sharply.
"No harm in waiting a day or so."
"You got enough money and then some from the profit —" He stopped suddenly as he hit upon the answer. "Oho!" he said with a broad smile, jerking his thumb at Peter Marlowe. "No money until your cobber goes an'
gets it, right?"
The King slipped off his wrist watch. "You want to hold this as security?"
"Oh no, matey, I trust you." He looked at Peter Marlowe. "Well, seems like a lot depends on you, old son." When he turned back to the King his eyes were crinkled merrily. "Gives me time, too, don't it?"
"Huh?" the King said innocently.
"Come off it, mate. You know the ring's been bushwhacked.
"There's only you in the camp what can handle it. If I could've, you think I'd let you in on it?" Timsen's beam was seraphic. "So that gives me time to find the bushwhacker, right? If be conies to you first, you won't have the money to pay, right? Without the money he won't let go of it, right? No money, no deal." Timsen waited and then said benignly, "'Course you could tell me when the bastard offers it, couldn't you? After all, it's me property, right?"
"Right," the King said agreeably.
"But you won't," Timsen sighed. "Wot a lot of ruddy thieves."
He bent over Peter Marlowe and checked his pulse. "Hum," he said reflectively. "Pulse's up."