"Destroyer 013 - Acid Rock.pdb" - читать интересную книгу автора (Williams Remo)Dr. Nilsson cauterized the wound because there was no antiseptic in the hospital powerful enough to cleanse it. He used a knife heated over coals. Lhasa made no sound, but when he was sure the smell of his burning flesh was in his brother's nostrils, he said:
"I understand now how difficult it must be for you to know that if you had the proper medicines, you could cure people instead of just watching them go off to die." "What we do here, Lhasa, is better than nothing." "It seems an injustice though, to offer less than we can. It seems an injustice that because of money people must die." "What brings about this sudden sense of charity in you, Lhasa?" asked Gunner, wrapping the 78 shoulder in a cheap bandage expertly, so that the rough cloth allowed the wound room to breathe, yet prevented dirt from entering. "Perhaps it is not charity, brother. Perhaps it is pride, I know what you can do, and to see a Nilsson fail day after day just for lack of money offends me." "If you are suggesting that we revert to our traditional family work, find another suggestion, at least one that wasn't decided finally twentyfive years ago. How does the wound feel?" "As well as sixteenth century medicine can make it." "I am surprised the panther got that close to you. You never had that trouble before." "I am getting old." "You should have no trouble like this until you are in your seventies, considering what you know and what I have taught you." "You saw the wound. You see all the wounds. All the infections, tumors, viruses, broken legs, and all the things you cannot help because you haven't supplies. I wonder what kind of supplies one million American dollars could buy. I wonder what kind of hospital that would build. How many natives could be trained in medicine for that much money." "For all that much money, Lhasa, oh, the lives we could save. Drugs, doctors, medical technicians. I could make a million dollars into a hundred million dollars worth of healing." Dr. Nilsson returned the knife to the flames to cleanse it, because fire was the best antiseptic available in the primitive circumstances. "How many lives could you save with that, brother?" Dr. Gunner Nilsson thought a moment, then 79 shook his head. "I don't even want to entertain the thought. It makes me too sad." "A hundred? A thousand?" "Thousands. Tens of thousands," said Gunner. "Because the money could be used to create systems that would perpetuate themselves." "I was wondering," said Lhasa. "If one person's life is worth thousands of native lives." "Of course not." "But she's white," "You know how I feel about that. Too long has the color of a man's skin determined how long he will live." "All the more reason," Gunner said. Lhasa rose from his seat and tried to stretch the muscle of the cauterized wound. It throbbed as if it had its own heartbeat. "There is a rich white woman in the United States whose very breath could give you the tools to help this land. But we are not in that business anymore so I must forget it. We are the last of the Nilssons. You settled that a long time ago." "What are you talking about?" asked Gunner. "The one million dollars is real, brother. I was not creating a hypothesis for you. I was giving you a plan of action." "We will not use the family knowledge." "Of course," said Lhasa, smiling. "I agree with you. And frankly I must confess I believe one rich white life to be worth much more than all the stinking natives of this stinking jungle." "What are you doing to me?" "I am allowing you, dear brother, to watch your patients die so that a rich white American can live. Of course, even that won't save her life because she will be dead shortly anyhow. But en- 80 joy your ideals as you bury your little black friends." "Get out of here," said Gunner. "Get out of my hospital." But Lhasa left only the office. He waited in the ante room along with a woman whose gums were purple from chewing betel nut or from infection. Lhasa could not tell the difference, nor did he care very much. In two minutes, Gunner strode from his private office, "I'm here, brother," said Lhasa, laughing, and they left the hospital for a very long walk through the village. Was Lhasa sure of the money? Yes. He had heard of it four days ago when he was upriver. He had checked it out very carefully by telephone from the British staff officer's house. He still had some contacts on the continent. And he had finally talked to the man hi charge of disbursing the money. It was firm. One and a half million dollars. The man had heard of the Nilsson family. He would be pleased if they would take the assignment. "But when I returned you would not even speak to me but ordered me after this panther," Lhasa said. "I have this fear, brother, that you like to kill for the sake of killing," Gunner said. "Me, brother?" "Of course you. Why did you take bow and arrow to hunt panther?" "Did I do that?" "You know you did. Were you hunting the buffalo again, an animal these villagers tame for their livelihood?" "A buffalo likes to kill, brother," said Lhasa. |
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