
Dr. Neville was silent for a moment. McCoy could picture him in the hospital, his tricorder in hand,
probably displaying sensor readings that revealed everything but his patient’s kindergarten grade. Yet
Neville insisted on getting McCoy’s confirmation on anything more serious than an ingrown toenail. It
was a mystery how the man had ever gotten out of medical school without a good dose of
self-confidence.
He said, “I’m sorry to have bothered you, Doctor, but I thought you’d want to know. It appears to be a
spaceborne pathogen.”
McCoy’s right eyebrow jerked upward. “Spaceborne? How do you figure?”
“The patient is a ten-year-old male who came in complaining of a headache and upset stomach. Not
interesting in itself, but his story is. He says he was swimming in Lake Lytle when something fell out of the
sky and nearly hit him. He thought it was a meteor and dived to retrieve it, but grew sick almost
immediately.”
That didn’t sound like a meteor to McCoy. The park where he had been trying to relax was on a hillside
to the north of town; he looked out over the red tile rooftops to the blue lake on the valley floor beyond.
He could see nothing unusual from this distance, but that didn’t necessarily mean anything. “Have you
found the pathogen?”
“Not yet. We got some unusual readings at first, but now diagnostics reveal nothing wrong. Reynold
seems to have recovered on his own, but the case was unusual enough that I wanted to check with you in
case I’ve missed something.”
The name made McCoy sit up even straighter. “Reynold? Reynold Coates? Lilian’s boy?”
“That’s the one.”
“I’ll be right there. McCoy out.” He snapped his communicator shut, and with a heavy sigh rolled out of
the hammock. His julep glass sat in the grass, beads of moisture grown heavy on its sides. He picked it
up, took one more small sip of the sweet iced whiskey, then dropped it in the recycler on his way out of
the park. He promised himself that he’d throw his communicator away next time he came here, just so he
could enjoy his next mint julep to the end.
Neville had been right, though. This was one situation he wanted to see for himself.
Over the duration of this interminable mission, he’d had ample time to get acquainted with most of the
colony’s members, but few of them had impressed him as much as Reynold Coates and his mother. In
many ways Reynold was a typical ten-year-old boy, full of curiosity and spunk, but after his father was
killed in an ambush during the journey to Belle Terre, he had been forced into a much more adult role
than most kids his age. Lilian possessed a true pioneer’s spirit and determination, carrying on after her
husband’s death without complaint, but raising a son on her own was a tough job even with a boy like
Reynold. Her family’s dreams had been shattered during that one tragic moment in space, and McCoy
wasn’t about to let some errant meteor deal them any more problems.
He could see the hospital’s flat roof from where he stood. Governor Pardonnet had ordered that each of
the major settlements on Belle Terre should build their medical center close to the middle of town,
figuring it should be near as many people as possible. There was a transporter on site, but you couldn’t
always count on a transporter working when you needed it, especially here. For ten hours of every thirty,
a stellar phenomenon called Gamma Night disrupted the signal so badly you couldn’t transport a jug of