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A few minutes later, Kristin came out of the examining room, aided by a nurse. Martin had seen the nurse before, probably in the cafeteria, remembering her thick black hair, which she wore piled on her head in a tight bun.

He stood up as the woman approached the desk and heard the nurse instruct the receptionist to give Kristin an appointment in four days. Kristin looked very pale.

"Miss Lindquist," Martin called. "Are you finished?"

"I think so," said Kristin.

"How about that X ray?" asked Philips. "Do you feel up to it?"

"I think so," managed Kristin, again.

Suddenly the black-haired nurse strode back to the desk. "If you don't mind my asking, what kind of X rays are you talking about?"

"A lateral skull film," said Martin.

"I see," said the nurse. "The reason I ask is that Kristin has had an abnormal Pap test and we'd prefer she avoid abdominal or pelvic films until her Pap smear status is normal."

"No problem," said Philips. "In my department we're only interested in the head." He'd never heard of such an association between Pap smears and diagnostic X rays, but it sounded reasonable.

The nurse nodded, then left. Ellen Cohen slapped an appointment card in Kristin's waiting hand before turning and pretending to busy herself with her typewriter. "California slut," she muttered under her breath.

Martin guided Kristin away from the bustle of the clinic and led her through a connecting door into the hospital proper. Once the fire door had been passed, the scene looked very pleasant in contrast to the clinic. Kristin was surprised.

"These are private offices for some of the surgeons," explained Philips as they walked down a long carpeted hall. There were even oil paintings on the freshly painted walls.

"I thought the whole hospital was old and decayed," said Kristin.

"Hardly." An image of the subterranean morgue flashed through Philips' mind, immediately merging with his recent vision of the GYN clinic. "Tell me, Kristin, as a patient, how do you find the university's clinic?"

"That's a difficult question," said Kristin. "I hate gynecology appointments so much that I don't think I can give a fair answer."

"How does it compare with your past experience?"

"Well, it is terribly impersonal, at least it was yesterday when I saw the doctor. But today I only saw the nurse and it was better. But then again I didn't have to wait today like I did yesterday, and all they did was draw more blood and recheck my vision. I didn't have another exam. Thank God."

They reached the elevator area and Philips pressed the button.

"Ms. Blackman also had the time to explain my Pap smear. Apparently it wasn't bad. She said it was only Type II, which is common and almost reverts to normal spontaneously. She told me it was probably caused by cervical erosion and that I should use a weak douche and avoid sex."

Martin was momentarily nonplussed at Kristin's forthrightness. Like most physicians, he was surprisingly unaware that his being a doctor encouraged people to make their secrets accessible.

Arriving in X-ray, Philips sought out Kenneth Robbins and put Kristin in his hands for the single lateral skull film he wanted. Since it was after four, the department was relatively quiet and one of the main X-ray rooms was empty. Robbins took the X ray and disappeared into the darkroom to load the film into the automatic developer. While Kristin waited, Martin stationed himself at the slot in the main hall where the film would emerge.

"You look like a cat watching a mouse hole," said Denise. She'd come up behind Philips and surprised him.

"I feel like one. Down in GYN I found a patient with similar symptoms to Marino and the others and I'm holding my breath to see if there's the same radiological picture. How did your angiorams go this afternoon?"

"Very well, thank you. I appreciated your letting me work on my own."

"Don't thank me. You earned it."

At that moment the tip of Kristin's X ray appeared, then oozed out of the roller, dropping into the holding bin. Martin snatched it up and put it on the viewer. His finger scanned back and forth in an area approximately over Kristin's ear.

"Damn," said Philips. "It's clear."

"Oh come on!" protested Denise. "Don't tell me you actually want the patient to have the pathology."

"You're right," said Martin. "I don't mean to wish it on anyone. I just want a ease that I can X-ray properly."

Robbins stepped out of the darkroom. "You want any more films, Dr. Philips?"

Martin shook his head, took the X ray and walked into the room where Kristin was waiting. Denise followed.

"Good news," said Philips, waving the film. "Your X ray is normal." Then he told Kristin that perhaps they should repeat it in a week if her symptoms persisted. He asked her for her phone number and gave her his direct-dial number in case she had any questions.

Kristin thanked him and tried to stand. Immediately she had to support herself by grabbing the X ray table as a wave of dizziness hit her. The room seemed to spin in a clockwise direction.

"Are you all right?" Martin asked, holding her arm.

"I think so," said Kristin, blinking. "It was that same dizziness. But it's already gone." What she didn't say was that she again smelled the familiar obnoxious odor. It was too bizarre a symptom for her to share. "I'll be all right. I think I'd better get home."

Philips offered to get her a taxi but she insisted she was all right. As the elevator door closed she waved and even managed a smile.

"That was a very clever way to get an attractive young woman's phone number," said Denise, as she walked back to Philips' office. Rounding the corner, Martin was relieved when he saw that Helen had left. Denise took one look in his room and gasped in disbelief. "What the hell?"

"Don't say anything," said Philips, making his way through the debris to his desk. "My life is disintegrating and smart comments are not going to help." He picked up the messages Helen had left. As he had expected, there were calls marked important from Goldblatt and Drake. After staring at them for a minute, he allowed the two pieces of paper to waft in a gentle spiral into his large institutional wastebasket.

Then he turned on the computer and fed in Kristin's skull film.

"Well! How's it going?" said Michaels, appearing at the doorway. He could tell from the litter that little had changed since the morning visit.

"Depends on what you're referring to," said Philips. "If you mean the program, the answer is fine. I've only run a few films, but so far it is performing with an accuracy of about a hundred-ten percent."

"Wonderful," said Michaels, clapping his hands.

"It's more than wonderful," said Philips. "It's fantastic! It's the only thing around here that has been going right. I'm just sorry I haven't had more time to work on it. Unfortunately, I'm behind on my regular work. But I'm going to stay here for a while tonight and run as many films as I can." Philips saw Denise turn and look at him. He tried to read her expression but the noisy clatter of the typewriter rapidly spewing out the report captured his attention. Michaels saw what was happening and he came up behind Philips to look over his shoulder. From Denise's perspective, the two of them looked like proud parents.

"It's reading a skull film I just took on a young woman," Martin said. "Her name is Kristin Lindquist. I thought maybe she'd have the same abnormality as those other patients I described to you. But she doesn't."

"Why are you so committed to this one abnormality?" asked Michaels. "Personally, I'd rather see you spending your time on the program itself. There will be time for this kind of investigative fun later."

"You don't know doctors," said Martin. "When we release this little computer on the unsuspecting medical community it's going to be like confronting the Medieval Catholic Church with Copernican astronomy. If we could present a new radiological sign that the program had discovered, it would make acceptance much easier."