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"How'd you get caught?" she asked the doctor.
"Ha! We had orders to riot at a certain time and place and I was sent from my hospital to officiate. I got ga.s.sed along with everyone else. The Cats don't ever ask questions.
They're effective that way. But sending one of theirs to colonize " He shook his head in surprise. "Whaddid he do?"
"He'd killed a patrol leader," Kris said. "I watched the pursuit from where I was hiding. "You were hiding?" Kris grinned. "On Barevi."
"Barevi?" He shot her a quirky smile. "Sounds Aborigine."
"Does, doesn't it Catteni Aborigine, at least. Barevi's one of their big distribution and R&R planets. Only a couple of big cities and s.p.a.ce ports.
Slave-trading's the biggest industry there. And resupply of Catteni s.h.i.+ps.
I figured out, from watching the guy who owned me, how to drive one of those little flitters of theirs and appropriated it one evening." She grinned at Leon.
"Managed quite handily in the jungle there until he," and she jerked her head back at Zainal, "dropped in on me. I was taking him back to where he belongs when I got caught in a riot-ga.s.sing, too."
"Hmmm.
"He knew a bit about this planet, enough to save a lot of us from getting eaten by those scavengers, or caught by the avians.
"The Cats didn't leave much for us to go on with," he said in a gloomy tone.
"Zainal says that's how they've colonized a lot of places." She shot a look at him and wondered if she'd offend with her next comment.
"Sort of like you Aussies were. We voted to call the planet Botany." "Did you now?" And Leon Dane shot her a startled look but he grinned.
"Well, it fits. Australia - well, the Sydney area at least - was settled by convicts."
"Made a good job of it, too, didn't they?"
"I take the point, Kris Bjornsen. And they had as little as we have.
Maybe less. We at least have a lot of specialists."
"Many aliens?
Deskis, Turs, Morphins, Rugarians?" Leon shrugged. "I was working more on the human injuries. But I noticed some strange-looking creatures m the hospital cave. Stick thin, like the one that came with us to fetch you.
"The Deskis. They're not doing well here. Missing some essential ingredient in their diet."
"Is that why that bloke was picking the thornbushes?"
"Hope so." Then Lenny and Ninety declared they were rested enough to take over. Kris was quite willing to give up her end of the litter, guilty though it made her feel for the rest of the way back to the camp.
Lit by many torches, Mitford, Murph, Greene and Dowdall were still interviewing new arrivals when the rescuers arrived by third moonrise.
In spite of the late hour - or was it early? - there was a great deal of activity and the smell of freshly roasted meats Instead of going into the main cavern, however, the bearers swerved to one of the lesser caves.
"Hospital," Lenny said when Kris wanted to know.
"Quite a set-up now." But there was something about the way he wouldn't meet her eyes that bothered Kris.
"I'll stay with him," she said firmly. "He'll need . .
"You . . ." and Leon Dane prodded her chest with a firm finger, "need rest." In the better light of the torches, she realized that he was a good-looking man in his midthirties, spare as so many Australians seemed to be.
"I'll rest better with . . . my buddy," and she added that designation with defensive pride. Dane was looking at her now in a way that made her refer to him in that fas.h.i.+on.
"That way, is it?"
"NO! Not that way," she said, fiercely now.
"But I got him into this mess and I'll stand by him."
"Good on you, Sheila," Dane said, and squeezed her arm in approval. "But he'll be tended while you .
and he prodded her chest with one finger, " sleep." It was a small cave and anyone entering had to stoop or risk a crack on the skull.
Inside there was more headroom, sufficient even for Zainal when he recovered. She said "when' as positively as she could to herself, though he lay far too still to suit her when his litter was placed on the waiting mound of blanket-covered boughs. There was another bed on the other side of the den and she looked longingly at it. Then turned back to see Dane checking the wound again and Zainal's pulse.
"He'll do. Tough b.a.s.t.a.r.d," he said again. "You," and he pointed at Kris and then the bed, "get some rest. I'll check in during the night." He gave her a grin. "Haven't lost a Catteni patient yet." Then, when she did not immediately obey his injunction, he hauled her the step to the bed and pushed her down on the boughs, spreading the blanket over her. "Sleep.
She did, rousing once or twice when she heard movement but it was always caused by Dane, checking on his patient.
When she finally woke up, she stretched luxuriously, knowing that she had slept herself out. But a low moan brought her alert instantly and scrambling to Zainal's side.
His injured leg, bare of covering apart from the compress, was twice its normal size well up into the thigh. The flesh when she gingerly touched it was almost burning to the touch. The compress was dry and clung to the suppurating flesh when she tried to check the wound.
"Oh lordee," she murmured and then banged her forehead on leaving the den. "Ouch!"
"Gotcha, did it?" said Lenny sympathetically, rising from a stool by the entrance.
"What are you doing here?" she said, inhaling against the pain of her sc.r.a.ped forehead. Her hand came away with dots of blood.
"Being careful not to bang my skull open like you just did," he said, grinning. There was that in his quickly averted glance that told her he was there for another reason entirely.
"Was I supposed to leave him out there to die?" she demanded.
"Don't jump on me, Kris, I like the big guy," Lenny said.
"Mitford just doesn't need any trouble."
"Mutiny on Botany, huh?"
"Huh?" Lenny echoed, totally nonplussed by her cryptic remark. "Look," he added hurriedly, "Dane'll be around again soon. Go get some breakfast. I'll be here till you get back.
"It's ridiculous with all Zainal has done for the camp that he has to have a guard - - "Now, look, Kris, I'm not so much a guard as I am a sort of orderly," and Lenny looked embarra.s.sed, "in case he needs help.
You know what I mean?"
"I'm paranoid, I guess," she said, relaxing a little. "Dane said anything about his chances?" Lenny shrugged.
"Didn't ask. I just volunteered. I'm on duty for them, too," he said and gestured to the opening obliquely across the tunnel. "We got a lot of patients. Oh, and that Missus Bollinger had a baby boy while we were gone. Fine big lad." Kris smiled through her sigh of relief.
"That kind of good news is very welcome.
"Don't worry. Mitford's got everyone organized already," and Lenny's grin was mischievous. Then he gave her a little push towards the tunnel entrance. "G'wan. Eat.
You're off duty today, anyway, with your buddy on the sick list." Kris didn't hear any nuance in his use of "buddy' so she relaxed. She could safely leave Zainal in Lenny's charge.
"G'wan," he said, smiling kindly, and gave her a half-turn towards the entrance. "Eat. Bread's getting better now the chemist lads've got a good yeast going." She took her time, peering in at the various units in this "hospital', noticing a lot of unfamiliar faces, some obviously in a good deal of discomfort, to judge by their expressions.
She saw Anna Bollinger, sitting up in her "bed', nursing her infant and would have pa.s.sed by but Anna saw her and waved her in.
"How's the Catteni? I heard he was badly hurt," she said.
Then added in a hard voice and with a scowl. "How?" From the "doorway', Kris answered, wondering about the change in her voice.
Anna had good reason to be grateful to Zainal. In a neutral voice she said: "On his way to keep people from getting scavengered in the dark, he got a thorn in the calf of his leg and had to carve it out." Anna shuddered. "Ooo, nasty. Give him my regards," and she looked lovingly down at the swaddled mite in her arms. "I'd never have had my baby if he hadn't helped me get here." She sighed. "I'm just glad it was I mean - He'll be all right?"
"Yes, Anna, and thanks for your good wishes. I'll tell him. And thanks," Kris said and strode the rest of the way to the outer ledge feeling that perhaps, after all, she'd been imagining things.
The sundial indicated the time as near Botany's noon and, for a wonder, Mitford was absent from his office, though there were others, busily bending over the desk-stones at their tasks. There were other people, the newest arrivals since she didn't recognize any of the faces, evidently revived enough to take part in the business of the camp. There was also a handful just sitting in the sun, eyes closed: a mixed bag because she could spot some Asians as well as the dusky skin of the East Indians.
Above their heads, tacked to the south-facing wall of the ravine, was displayed a veritable mural of rock-squat hides, indicating the continued prowess of the camp's hunters. How much farther were the hunters having to go to catch enough to feed the mult.i.tude now here?
She s.h.i.+vered and not so much because the air felt cool to her despite the suns.h.i.+ne but because she worried about the tactical problems of supply. For instance, would there be enough hides to give everyone a warm coat this winter?
And, if a Botany day was twenty-eight hours long, how long were their months? Years? How long till spring?
How many more loads would the Catteni drop down on this unsuspecting planet? How would they cope with this influx, much less more? She was hungry and that always made her att.i.tude negative.
Sandy hailed her as she came into the cook cavern.
"Hi there, gal, got something just out of the oven for the likes of you."
"The likes of me?" Kris said in a low voice as she hunkered down by Sandy. She'd glanced quickly about the cavern and saw welcoming grins on other faces: people she did recognize.
"Yeah, you're a heroine, didn't you know?" Sandy winked as she held up the pitcher, waiting until Kris hurriedly undid her cup from its belt loop. "Right up there with Mitford, charging down the ravine like a berserker." She put a pottery plate, almost a perfect circle, on the rock nearest Kris: it held a browned piece of rock-squat, a slice of nicely toasted bread, and some fried circles.
"Not quite potatoes but as near as never-mind," Sandy told her, pa.s.sing over a gracefully carved fork.
Kris grinned, looking down at the utensil and turning it over in her hand.
"Chantilly silverware it isn't, but better than risking sharp knife points in your mouth." Sandy poured herself a fresh cup and settled close to Kris. "How's the Cat scuse me, Zainal, this morning?"
"I don't know. His leg is swollen awful big.
"The medics are trying a bread poultice. Penicillin it isn't but my grannie was big on a bread poultice for boils and things." Sandy patted Kris's knee encouragingly.
"They're tough, Catteni. Imagine him, cutting the thorn out of his own leg!" She clicked her tongue at such courage. "And we got quite a board of medical men now." She chuckled. "And other specialists. Most of "em seem to have been taken from Sydney. From Botany Bay to Botany," and she chuckled again "Hey, this is good," Kris said, having tried the fried tuber. It was not unlike a sweet potato in texture and taste. "Say, are those thornbush leaves doing the Deskis any good?" Sandy nodded. "Made a tea when Coo explained what he wanted and we've dosed even the sickest." Her expression altered. "We lost three, you know, while you were out on that last patrol."
"No, I didn't." Kris stopped chewing. "They look so frail . .
-"They are if they don't have the right food." Sandy remained grim. "Their bones break if you so much as touch them hard. You know who helped nurse "em?
Patti Sue!" That did surprise Kris.
"She's not much heavier than they are and has a light touch. She volunteered." Sandy grimaced. "She feels safe with the Deskis and even the Rugarians, you know."
"Jay Greene?" Now Sandy chuckled. "He's going slow but it was him who suggested she'd be good at tending the Deskis. She has been, but it d.a.m.ned near kills her to lose one."
"Look, they got the same rations we all did back on Barevi. I thought the ration bars were enough," Kris said.
"Ah, Coo says they were allowed "plursaw", too, and that's what they have to have in their diet to keep their bones from going soft. A kind of calcium additive, I guess. There isn't an equivalent here .
unless that thornbush junk fflls the gap. He looks better, I know, but he's a young one."
"I didn't know," and Kris was remorseful. "I never asked either."
"There now, Kris, don't take on about it. It isn't as if you've had time to be social, you know, in and out of camp as you are." Sandy reached over for a covered pot set to one side of her hearth. "Made this special for Zainal. It's sort of a broth and the nearest thing to chicken soup I can put together here. It is nouris.h.i.+ng and it doesn't taste too bad. Maybe you can get some down him. Leon says injured Catteni sometimes have a problem with dehydration. "Bout the only thing that can debilitate them." Kris thanked Sandy, deeply touched and much rea.s.sured.
"Would you know Aarens?"
"Yeah," and there was no joy in Sandy's reply.
"Is he around?" Sandy gave a malicious chuckle. "Him! Boy, didn't he luck out. Seems there's some good to him after all. He's a genius with gadgets. Don't worry about him."
"I don't worry about him.
I worry about his mouth."
"Don't." Kris thanked Sandy again and then made her way back to the hospital. She paused briefly when she saw the line of laden hunters returning to camp. She grinned to see the loaves and fishes that were being supplied to the mult.i.tude. She should have asked Sandy how many had been on the latest drop. And her patrol had found yet another nest of empty barns.
Lenny was gone from his post and the small room was crowded by those attending Zainal: Leon among others she identified as medical personnel. She made herself small and inched in, carefully ducking under the lintel and looking for someplace safe to put the pot of broth which was hot. Leon rose to his feet just then.
"Certainly unsophisticated but the best we have to hand.
Ah, Kris," and she could see how tired he was though his hazel eyes were very much alive and keen in his saturnine face. "W're using a bread poultice to draw the infection, now that you lot have providentially rediscovered bread on this G.o.dforsaken planet." He grinned. "Great bunch of improvisers here. She's the one found that anaesthetic.
if we could only figure out how to dilute it without losing its effectiveness." His grin extended to his colleagues who acknowledged her appearance with smiles or nods. "Are you available to watch him?
Lenny's off duty."
"I am," she said. "Sandy gave me broth for him." "I'll be right with you," Leon said as the others moved out of the den, all being careful to duck on their way out. "Good-o on the broth.
When I was treating Catteni in Sydney for wounds, dehydration was the big danger.