During the landing procedures, Dal had worked to prepare enough of the precious antibody suspension, with Fuzzy’s co-operation, to handle a large number of inoculations. By the time the ship touched down he had a dozen flasks and several hundred syringes ready. Hundreds of the unafflicted people were crowding around the ship, staring in open wonder as Dal, Jack and Tiger came down the ladder and went into close conference with the spokesman.
It took some time to explain to the spokesman why they could not begin then and there with the mass inoculations against the plague. First, they needed test cases, in order to make certain that what they thought would work in theory actually produced the desired results. Controls were needed, to be certain that the antibody suspension alone was bringing about the changes seen and not something else. At last, orders went out from the spokesman. Two hundred uninfected Bruckians were admitted to a large roped-off area near the ship, and another two hundred in late stages of the disease were led stumbling into another closed area. Preliminary skin-tests of the antibody suspension showed no sign of untoward reaction. Dal began filling syringes while Tiger and Jack started inoculating the two groups.
“If it works with these cases, it will be simple to immunize the whole population,” Tiger said. “From the amounts we used on the guinea pigs, it looks as if only tiny amounts are needed. We may even be able to train the Bruckians to give the injections themselves.”
“And if it works we ought to have a brand new medical service contract ready for signature with Hospital Earth,” Jack added eagerly. “It won’t be long before we have those Stars, you wait and see! If we can only get this done fast enough.”
They worked feverishly, particularly with the group of terminal cases. Many were dying even as the shots were being given, while the first symptoms of the disease were appearing in some of the unafflicted ones. Swiftly Tiger and Jack went from patient to patient while Dal kept check of the names, numbers and locations of those that were inoculated.
And even before they were finished with the inoculations, it was apparent that they were taking effect. Not one of the infected patients died after inoculation was completed. The series took three hours, and by the time the four hundred doses were administered, one thing seemed certain: that the antibody was checking the deadly march of the disease in some way.
The Bruckian spokesman was so excited he could hardly contain himself; he wanted to start bringing in the rest of the population at once. “We’ve almost exhausted this first batch of the material,” Dal told him. “We will have to prepare more—but we will waste time trying to move a whole planet’s population here. Get a dozen aircraft ready, and a dozen healthy, intelligent workers to help us. We can show them how to use the material, and let them go out to the other population centers all at once.”
Back aboard the ship they started preparing a larger quantity of the antibody suspension. Fuzzy had regenerated back to normal weight again, and much to Dal’s delight had been splitting off small segments of pink protoplasm in a circle all around him, as though anticipating further demands on his resources. A quick test-run showed that the antibody was also being regenerated. Fuzzy was voraciously hungry, but the material in the second batch was still as powerful as in the first.
The doctors were almost ready to go back down, loaded with enough inoculum and syringes to equip themselves and a dozen field workers when Jack suddenly stopped what he was doing and cocked an ear toward the entrance lock.
“What’s wrong?” Dal said.
“Listen a minute.”
They stopped to listen. “I don’t hear anything,” Tiger said.
Jack nodded. “I know. That’s what I mean. They were hollering their heads off when we came back aboard. Why so quiet now?”
He crossed over to the viewscreen scanning the field below, and flipped on the switch. For a moment he just stared. Then he said: “Come here a minute. I don’t like the looks of this at all.”
Dal and Tiger crowded up to the screen. “What’s the matter?” Tiger said. “I don’t see . . . wait a minute!”
“Yes, you’d better look again,” Jack said. “What do you think, Dal?”
“We’d better get down there fast,” Dal said, “and see what’s going on. It looks to me like we’ve got a tiger by the tail . . . .”
They climbed down the ladder once again, with the antibody flasks and sterile syringes strapped to their backs. But this time the greeting was different from before.
The Bruckian spokesman and the others who had not yet been inoculated drew back from them in terror as they stepped to the ground. Before, the people on the field had crowded in eagerly around the ship; now they were standing in silent groups staring at the doctors fearfully and muttering among themselves.
But the doctors could see only the inoculated people in the two roped-off areas. Off to the right among the infected Bruckians who had received the antibody there were no new dead—but there was no change for the better, either. The sick creatures drifted about aimlessly, milling like animals in a cage, their faces blank, their jaws slack, hands wandering foolishly. Not one of them had begun reacting normally, not one showed any sign of recognition or recovery.
But the real horror was on the other side of the field. Here were the healthy ones, the uninfected ones who had received preventative inoculations. A few hours before they had been left standing in quiet, happy groups, talking among themselves, laughing and joking . . . .
But now they weren’t talking any more. They stared across at the doctors with slack faces and dazed eyes, their feet shuffling aimlessly in the dust. All were alive, but only half-alive. The intelligence and alertness were gone from their faces; they were like the empty shells of the creatures they had been a few hours before, indistinguishable from the infected creatures in the other compound.
Jack turned to the Bruckian spokesman in alarm. “What’s happened here?” he asked. “What’s become of the ones we inoculated? Where have you taken them?”
The spokesman shrank back as though afraid Jack might reach out to touch him. “Taken them!” he cried. “We have moved none of them! Those are the ones you poisoned with your needles. What have you done to make them like this?”
“It—it must be some sort of temporary reaction to the injection,” Jack faltered. “There was nothing that we used that could possibly have given them the disease, we only used a substance to help them fight it off.”
The Bruckian was shaking his fist angrily. “It’s no reaction, it is the plague itself! What kind of evil are you doing? You came here to help us, and instead you bring us more misery. Do we not have enough of that to please you?”
Swiftly the doctors began examining the patients in both enclosures, and on each side they found the same picture. One by one they checked the ones that had previously been untouched by the plague, and found only the sagging jaws and idiot stares.
“There’s no sense examining every one,” Tiger said finally. “They’re all the same, every one.”
“But this is impossible,” Jack said, glancing apprehensively at the growing mob of angry Bruckians outside the stockades. “What could have happened? What have we done?”
“I don’t know,” Tiger said. “But whatever we’ve done has turned into a boomerang. We knew that the antibody might not work, and the disease might just go right ahead, but we didn’t anticipate anything like this.”
“Maybe some foreign protein got into the batch,” Dal said.
Tiger shook his head. “It wouldn’t behave like this. And we were careful getting it ready. All we’ve done was inject an antibody against a specific virus. All it could have done was to kill the virus, but these people act as though they’re infected now.”