Featured Sections
·
Advertise
·
Author Directory
·
Award Winners
·
Bestsellers
·
Book Blog
·
Book Classifieds
·
Book Excerpts
·
Book Giveaways
·
Book Resources
·
Book Reviews
·
Book Searches
·
Books to Film
·
Features
·
Future Releases
·
Newsstand
·
Publishing Industry
·
Subscribe
Reading Sections
Book Publishing News
Children's Books
Comics
Fantasy/SF
General Fiction
Lifestyle
Mystery
Nonfiction
Romance
Site Information
Advertise
Feedback
Linking to us
Homepage
RSS Feeds
Subscribe
|
Flinx's Folly
by Alan Dean Foster
Del Ray, 2003
Click here for more information about
this author.
CHAPTER
1
“He’s not dead—but watch out for the winged
snake.”
As she studied the tall young man lying unconscious
on the fast-moving gurney, the alert eyes of the duty physician at
Reides Central narrowed. “What winged snake?”
The harried
medtech guiding the gurney gestured at the slow rise and fall of the
patient’s chest. “It’s coiled up under his shirt between his left
arm and his ribs. Squirmed in there and hid when we arrived to pick
him up. Sticks its head out occasionally for a quick look around,
but that’s all. Won’t leave. Hasn’t bothered anyone—so far. Almost
as if it senses we’re trying to help.”
The emergency sector
physician nodded tersely as she continued to pace the gurney. “I’ll
be sure and keep my fingers away. Why wasn’t it caught and
neutralized before the patient was brought in?”
The medtech
glanced sideways at her. “Quickref says it’s an Alaspinian minidrag.
They bond emotionally with their owners. If you’d heard what I was
told, you wouldn’t get any ideas about trying to separate
them.”
They rounded a corner, dodged an oncoming stasis
chair, and headed up another corridor. “Hell of a way to practice
medicine,” the doctor muttered to no one in particular. “Like there
aren’t enough obstacles put in our way.” She leaned slightly forward
over the motionless form, but she was unable to detect any movement
in the indicated area. “It’s dangerous, then?”
The medtech
smoothly eased the gurney into an empty monitoring chamber.
“Apparently only if you try to separate them. Or if it thinks you’re
trying to harm its master.”
“We’re trying to help him, just
like we’re trying to help all the others who were brought
in.”
As soon as the waiting sensors detected the gurney’s
presence, a dozen different automated appliances initiated a
standard preliminary patient scan. They automatically disregarded
the presence of the flying snake just as they ignored the basic but
neat and clean clothing in which the patient was dressed. The doctor
stepped back from the gurney and examined her pad as one recording
after another was made and silently transferred. A duplicate set was
simultaneously being entered into the official hospital
files.
The medtech looked on thoughtfully. “Want me to
stay?”
When the doctor glanced up from her softly glowing
pad, it was only to eye the patient. “Up to you. I’ll be careful of
the snake.” Now that she knew where it was, she could see the slight
bulge occasionally moving beneath the patient’s shirt. “If I have
any problems, I’ll alert Security.”
Nodding, the medtech
turned to go. “Suit yourself. They probably need me in Receiving
now, anyway.”
The doctor continued speaking without looking
at him. “How many all together?”
“Twenty-two. All standing,
walking, or sitting within a few meters of one another in the same
part of the Reides shopping complex. All displayed the same
symptoms: a sharp gasp, followed by a rolling back of the eyes, and
down they went—out cold. Adults, children, males, females—two
thranx, one Tolian, the rest human. No external signs of injury, no
indication of stroke or myocardial infarction, nothing. As if they’d
all simultaneously been put to sleep. That’s what the official
witness reports say, anyway. They’re pretty consistent
throughout.”
She gestured absently. “It’ll take a minute or
two for Processing to finish admitting this one. First thing we’ll
do is correlate data between patients for indications of other
similarities, so we can try and define some parameters. I’d be
surprised if there weren’t several.” Her voice fell slightly.
“There’d better be.”
Halfway out the portal, the medtech
hesitated. “Viral or bacterial infection?”
“Nothing that
contradicts it, but it’s much too early to say.” She looked up from
her pad to meet his gaze. Concern was writ large there, and he was
clearly looking for some sort of reassurance. “At a guess, I’d say
neither one. The zone of influence was too sharply circumscribed.
Same goes for a narcoleptic gas. And there are no overt indicators
that would indicate an airborne infectious agent—no elevated or
reduced blood pressure, no respiratory problems, no dermatological
indications, no dilated pupils: not so much as a rash or a reported
sneezing fit.”
“What then?”
“Again, it’s too soon to
say. Some kind of area-specific sonic projection, maybe, though
there’s no evidence of cochlear damage in any of the patients.
Delineated flash hallucinogen, cerebroelectrical interrupt—there are
numerous possibilities. Based on what I’ve read and seen so far, I’d
say the event was a site-specific one-time event, and that no
organic agent is involved. But that’s a very preliminary
assessment.”
With a grateful nod, the medtech departed. As
the portal opaqued behind him, the doctor turned back to her
patient.
Other than being taller than average and discounting
the presence of the alien pet, he appeared no different from others
who had been brought in. She knew results were expected fast. Having
twenty-two customers suddenly drop unconscious in one’s place of
business was not good publicity for any enterprise. Fortunately for
Reides’s management, everything had happened so quickly and the
local emergency teams had reacted rapidly enough that the local
media had not yet found their way to the hospital. By the time they
did, she and her fellow consulting physicians hoped to be ready with
some answers.
An attractive young man, she decided, with his
red hair and olive-hued skin. Tall, slim, and apparently healthy, if
one discounted his current condition. She guessed him to be
somewhere in his early twenties. A universal command bracelet
encircled one wrist, but there was no sign of whatever specially
attuned devices it might control. Probably nothing more elaborate
than a vit player, she decided. If it contained usable ident and
medical information, the medtech had failed to tap into it. Well,
that could come later, following the initial diagnosis. The scanners
would tell her everything she needed to know to prescribe treatment.
On the bracelet a single telltale glowed softly green, showing that
it was active.
Beneath the patient’s shirt, a ropy shape
shifted position. She did her best not to stare in its direction.
She knew nothing about Alaspinian minidrags beyond the little the
medtech had just told her. As long as it did not interfere with her
work, she had no desire to know more.
She fidgeted, waiting
for the scanners to finish. Even though no serious trauma was
involved, the sudden influx of unconscious patients had momentarily
overwhelmed the hospital’s emergency staff. She was already eager to
move on to the next patient.
The preliminary readings began
appearing on her pad as well as on the main monitor that projected
from the wall. Heart rate, hemoglobin content, white cell count,
respiration, temperature: everything was well within normal,
accepted parameters. If anything, the readings suggested an
exceptionally healthy individual. Cerebral scan indicated that the
patient was presently engaged in active dreaming. Neural activity
levels . . . general brain scan . . .
She frowned, checked
her pad again. Her eyes rose to squint at the main monitor. It was
already scrolling through a list of possible allergies and finding
none. Manually interrupting the process, she used her pad to go back
to the readout that had attracted her attention. It now appeared on
both her pad and the monitor as a separate insert.
The
figures were wrong. They had to be wrong. So was the direct imaging.
There had to be something the matter with this room’s cerebral
scanner. If its results had been a little off, she would have put it
down to a calibration error. But the readouts were so far out of
line that she was concerned they could potentially compromise
patient treatment.
For one thing the patient’s parietal
lobes—the parts of the brain responsible for handling visual and
spatial tasks—appeared grossly swollen. Since according to the
steadily lengthening list of benchmarks being provided by the
instrumentation there was no neurobiological basis for such
enlargement, it had to be a scanner error. However, that did not
account for the exceptionally heightened blood flow to all parts of
the patient’s brain, nor for what appeared to be some completely
unrecognizable enzymatic and electrical activity. Furthermore,
although the frontal cortex was quite dense, its apparent normality
was hardly in keeping with the contrasting readouts for other
portions of the cerebellum.
While many neurons were perfectly
normal, dense clusters of others scanned in certain parts of the
brain were swollen so large and were so inundated with activity as
to suggest a potentially fatal ongoing mutation—potentially, because
it was patently evident that the patient was still alive. Deeper
probing soon discovered additional unnatural distortions, including
what appeared to be scattered small tumors of a type and extensive
neural integration she had not previously encountered, either in
vivo or the medical literature.
She was not prepared to go
beyond initial observation to render a formal interpretation of what
she was seeing. She was no specialist, and these readings cried out
for one capable of properly analyzing them. That, or a technician to
repair and recalibrate the scanners. She opted to seek the latter’s
advice first. Bad scans made more sense than neurobiological
impossibilities. Take those distinctive tumors, for example. By
rights, intrusive growths of such size and in such locations should
have resulted in a serious degeneration of cognitive faculties or
even death. Yet all correlating scans indicated normal ongoing
physiological activity. Of course, she couldn’t be sure the patient
was not an idiot until he woke up and started to respond. All she
knew was that for a dumb dead man, he appeared to be in excellent
shape.
Excerpted from Flinx's Folly by Alan Dean Foster .
Copyright © 2003 by Alan Dean Foster. All rights reserved.
Posted with permission of the publisher.
No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without
permission in writing from the publisher.
More Information:
Amazon.com
Author Interview
|