"It will be necessary."
"Try the rhesus, " Burton said. "You'll want a post on it, anyway."
Stone directed the mechanical hands back to the wall, opening another door and withdrawing a cage containing a large brown adult rhesus monkey. The monkey screeched as it was lifted and banged against the bars of its cage.
Then it died, after flinging one hand to its chest with a look of startled surprise.
Stone shook his head. "Well, at least we know it's still biologically active. Whatever killed everyone in Piedmont is still there, and still as potent as ever. " He sighed. "If potent is the word."
Leavitt said, "We'd better start a scan of the capsule."
"I'll take these dead animals," Burton said, "and run the initial vector studies. Then I'll autopsy them."
Stone worked the mechanical hands once more. He picked up the cages that held the rat and monkey and set them on a rubber conveyor belt at the rear of the room. Then he pressed a button on a control console marked AUTOPSY. The conveyor belt began to move.
Burton left the room, walking down the corridor to the autopsy room, knowing that the conveyor belt, made to carry materials from one lab to another, would have automatically delivered the cages.
Stone said to Hall, "You're the practicing physician among us. I'm afraid you've got a rather tough job right now."
"Pediatrician and geriatrist?"
"Exactly. See what you can do about them. They're both in our miscellaneous room, the room we built precisely for unusual circumstances like this. There's a computer linkup there that should help you. The technician will show you how it works."
14. Miscellaneous
Chapter 12
HALL OPENED THE DOOR MARKED MISCELLANEOUS, thinking to himself that his job was indeed miscellaneous-- keeping alive an old man and a tiny infant. Both of them vital to the project, and both of them, no doubt, difficult to manage.
He found himself in another small room similar to the control room he had just left. This one also had a glass window, looking inward to a central room. In the room were two beds, and on the beds, Peter Jackson and the infant. But the incredible thing was the suits: standing upright in the room were four clear plastic inflated suits in the shape of men. From each suit, a tunnel ran back to the wall.
Obviously, one would have to crawl down the tunnel and then stand up inside the suit. Then one could work with the patients inside the room.
The girl who was to be his assistant was working in the room, bent over the computer console. She introduced herself as Karen Anson, and explained the working of the computer.
"This is just one substation of the Wildfire computer on the first level," she said. "There are thirty substations throughout the laboratory, all plugging into the computer. Thirty different people can work at once."
Hall nodded. Time-sharing was a concept he understood. He knew that as many as two hundred people had been able to use the same computer at once; the principle was that computers operated very swiftly-- in fractions of a second while people operated slowly, in seconds or minutes. One person using a computer was inefficient, because it took several minutes to punch in instructions, while the computer sat around idle, waiting. Once instructions were fed in, the computer answered almost instantaneously. This meant that a computer was rarely "working," and by permitting a number of people to ask questions of the computer simultaneously, you could keep the machine more continuously in operation.
"If the computer is really backed up, " the technician said, "there may be a delay of one or two seconds before you get your answer. But usually it's immediate. What we are using here is the MEDCOM program. Do you know it?"
Hall shook his head.
"It's a medical-data analyzer," she said. "You feed in information and it will diagnose the patient and tell you what to do next for therapy, or to confirm the diagnosis."
"Sounds very convenient."
"It's fast," she said. "All our lab studies are done by automated machines. So we can have complex diagnoses in a matter of minutes."
Hall looked through the glass at the two patients. "What's been done on them so far?"
"Nothing. At Level I, they were started on intravenous infusions. Plasma for Peter Jackson, dextrose and water for the baby. They both seem well hydrated now, and in no distress. Jackson is still unconscious. He has no pupillary signs but is unresponsive and looks anemic."
Hall nodded. "The labs here can do everything?"
"Everything. Even assays for adrenal hormones and things like partial thromboplastin times. Every known medical test is possible."
"All right. We'd better get started."
She turned on the computer. "This is how you order laboratory tests," she said. "Use this light pen here, and check off the tests you want. Just touch the pen to the screen."
She handed him a small penlight, and pushed the START button.
The screen glowed.
MEDCOM PROGRAM
LAB/ANALYS
CK/JGG/1223098
BLOOD:
COUNTS RBC
RETIC
PLATES
WBC
DIFF
HEMATOCRIT
HEMOGLOBIN
INDICES MCV
MCHC:
PROTIME
PTT
SED RATE
CHEMISTRY:
BRO
CA
CL
MG
PO4
K
NA
CO2
ENZYMES:
AMYLASE
CHOLINESTERASE
LIPASE
PHOSPHATASE,ACID
ALKALINE
LDH
SGOT
SGPT
PROTEIN:
ALB
GLOB
FIBRIN
TOTAL FRACTION
DIAGNOSTICS:
CHOLEST
CREAT
GLUCOSE
PBI