Part 10 (1/2)

I eyed him with speculation. Here was not a man who would take kindly to imaginative conjecture. So Dr. Lyon Sprague was not the man I'd like to talk to. With an inward smile, I said, ”I have a rather new idea about Mekstrom's that I'd like to discuss with the right party.”

He looked down at me, although our eyes were on the same level. ”I doubt that any layman could possibly come up with an idea that has not been most thoroughly discussed here among the research staff.”

”In cold words you feel that no untrained lunk has a right to have an idea.”

He froze. ”I did not say that.”

”You implied, at least, that suggestions from outsiders were not welcome. I begin to understand why the Medical Center has failed to get anywhere with Mekstrom's in the past twenty years.”

”What do you mean?” he snapped.

”Merely that it is the duty of all scientists to listen to every suggestion and to discard it only after it has been shown wrong.”

”Such as--?” he said coldly, with a curl of his eyebrows.

”Well, just for instance, suppose some way were found to keep a victim alive during the vital period, so that he would end up a complete Mekstrom Human.”

”The idea is utterly fantastic. We have no time for such idle speculation. There is too much foggy thinking in the world already. Why, only last week we had a Velikovsky Adherent tell us that Mekstrom's had been predicted in the Bible. There are still people reporting flying saucers, you know. We have no time for foolish notions or utter nonsense.”

”May I quote you?”

”Of course not,” he snapped stiffly. ”I'm merely pointing out that non-medical persons cannot have the grasp--”

The door opened again and a second man entered. The new arrival had pleasant blue eyes, a van d.y.k.e beard, and a good-natured air of self-confidence and competence. ”May I cut in?” he said to Dr. Sprague.

”Certainly. Mr. Cornell, this is Scholar Phelps, Director of the Center.

Scholar Phelps, this is Mr. Steve Cornell, a gentleman of the press,” he added in a tone of voice that made the identification a sort of nasty name. ”Mr. Cornell has an odd theory about Mekstrom's Disease that he intends to publish unless we can convince him that it is not possible.”

”Odd theory?” asked Scholar Phelps with some interest. ”Well, if Mr.

Cornell can come up with something new, I'll be most happy to hear him out.”

Dr. Lyon Sprague decamped with alacrity. Scholar Phelps smiled after him, then turned to me and said, ”Dr. Sprague is a diligent worker, businesslike and well-informed, but he lacks the imagination and the sense of humor that makes a man brilliant in research. Unfortunately, Dr. Sprague cannot abide anything that is not laid out as neat as an interlocking tile floor. Now, Mr. Cornell, how about this theory of yours?”

”First,” I replied, ”I'd like to know how come you turn up in the nick of time.”

He laughed good-naturedly. ”We always send Dr. Sprague out to interview visitors. If the visitor can be turned away easily, all is well and quiet. Dr. Sprague can do the job with ease. But if the visitor, like yourself, Mr. Cornell, proposes something that distresses the good Dr.

Sprague and will not be loftily dismissed, Dr. Sprague's blood pressure goes up. We all keep a bit of esper on his nervous system and when the fuse begins to blow, we come out and effect a double rescue.”

I laughed with him. Apparently the Medical Center staff enjoyed needling Dr. Sprague. ”Scholar Phelps, before I get into my theory, I'd like to know more about Mekstrom's Disease. I may not be able to use it in my article, but any background material works well with writers of fact articles.”

”You're quite right. What would you like to know?”

”I've heard, too many times, that no one knows anything at all about Mekstrom's. This is unbelievable, considering that you folks have been working on it for some twenty years.”

He nodded. ”We have some, but it's precious little.”

”It seems to me that you could a.n.a.lyze the flesh--”

He smiled. ”We have. The state of a.n.a.lytical chemistry is well advanced.

We could, I think, take a dry sc.r.a.ping out of the cauldron used by MacBeth's witches, and determine whether Shakespeare had reported the formula correctly. Now, young man, if you think that something is added to the human flesh to make it Mekstrom's Flesh, you are wrong. Standard a.n.a.lysis shows that the flesh is composed of exactly the same chemicals that normal flesh contains, in the same proportion. Nothing is added, as, for instance, in the case of calcification.”