just doing too good a job.”
“Well, maybe you can find some unclebodies to take care of them,” Ellie offered vaguely.
“Look, don’t make bad jokes—”
“I’m not making jokes! All I want is a husband back who doesn’t complain about how everything smells, and eats the dinners I cook, and doesn’t stand around in cold showers at six in the morning.”
“I know it’s miserable,” he said helplessly. “But I don’t know how to stop it.”
He found Jake and Coffin in tight-lipped conference when he reached the lab. “I can’t do it any more,” Coffin was saying. “I’ve begged them for time. I’ve threatened them. I’ve promised them everything but my upper plate. I can’t face them again, I just can’t.”
“We only have a few days left,” Jake said grimly. “If we don’t come up with something, we’re goners.”
Phillip’s jaw suddenly sagged as he stared at them. “You know what I think?” he said suddenly. “I think we’ve been prize idiots. We’ve gotten so rattled we haven’t used our heads. And all the time it’s been sitting there blinking at us!”
“What are you talking about?” snapped Jake.
“Unclebodies,” said Phillip.
“Oh, great God!”
“No, I’m serious.” Phillip’s eyes were very bright. “How many of those students do you think you can corral to help us?”
Coffin gulped. “Six hundred. They’re out there in the street right now, howling for a lynching.”
“All right, I want them in here. And I want some monkeys. Monkeys with colds, the worse colds the better.”
“Do you have any idea what you’re doing?” asked Jake.
“None in the least,” said Phillip happily, “except that it’s never been done before. But maybe it’s time we tried following our noses for a while.”
The tidal wave began to break two days later… only a few people here, a dozen there, but enough to confirm the direst newspaper predictions. The boomerang was completing its circle.
At the laboratory the doors were kept barred, the telephones disconnected. Within, there was a bustle of feverish—if odorous—activity. For the three researchers, the olfactory acuity had reached agonizing proportions. Even the small gas masks Phillip had devised could no longer shield them from the constant barrage of violent odors.
But the work went on in spite of the smell. Truckloads of monkeys arrived at the lab—cold-ridden monkeys, sneezing, coughing, weeping, wheezing monkeys by the dozen. Culture trays bulged with tubes, overflowed the incubators and work tables. Each day six hundred angry students paraded through the lab, arms exposed, mouths open, grumbling but co-operating.
At the end of the first week, half the monkeys were cured of their colds and were quite unable to catch them back; the other half had new colds and couldn’t get rid of them. Phillip observed this fact with grim satisfaction, and went about the laboratory mumbling to himself.
Two days later he burst forth jubilantly, lugging a sad-looking puppy under his arm. It was like no other puppy in the world. This puppy was sneezing and snuffling with a perfect howler of a cold.
The day came when they injected a tiny droplet of milky fluid beneath the skin of Phillip’s arm, and then got the virus spray and gave his nose and throat a liberal application. Then they sat back and waited.
They were still waiting three days later.
“It was a great idea,” Jake said gloomily, flipping a bulging notebook closed with finality. “It just didn’t work, was all.”
Phillip nodded. Both men had grown thin, with pouches under their eyes. Jake’s right eye had begun to twitch uncontrollably whenever anyone came within three yards of him. “We can’t go on like this, you know. The people are going wild.”
“Where’s Coffin?”
“He collapsed three days ago. Nervous prostration. He kept having dreams about hangings.”
Phillip sighed. “Well, I suppose we’d better just face it. Nice knowing you, Jake. Pity it had to be this way.”
“It was a great try, old man. A great try.”
“Ah, yes. Nothing like going down in a blaze of—”
Phillip stopped dead, his eyes widening. His nose began to twitch. He took a gasp, a larger gasp, as a long- dead reflex came sleepily to life, shook its head, reared back…
Phillip sneezed.
He sneezed for ten minutes without a pause, until he lay on the floor blue-faced and gasping for air. He caught hold of Jake, wringing his hand as tears gushed from his eyes. He gave his nose an enormous blow, and headed shakily for the telephone.
“It was a sipple edough pridciple,” he said later to Ellie as she spread mustard on his chest and poured more warm water into his foot bath. “The Cure itself depedded upod it—the adtiged-adtibody reactiod. We had the adtibody agaidst the virus, all ridght; what we had to find was sobe kide of adtibody agaidst the adtibody.” He sneezed violently, and poured in nose drops with a happy grin.
“Will they be able to make it fast enough?”
“Just aboudt fast edough for people to get good ad eager to catch cold agaid,” said Phillip. “There’s odly wud little hitch….”
Ellie Dawson took the steaks from the grill and set them, still sizzling, on the dinner table. “Hitch?”
Phillip nodded as he chewed the steak with a pretence of enthusiasm. It tasted like slightly damp K- ration.
“This stuff we’ve bade does a real good job. Just a little too good.” He wiped his nose and reached for a fresh tissue.
“I bay be wrog, but I thik I’ve got this cold for keeps,” he said sadly. “Udless I cad fide ad adtibody agaidst the adtibody agaidst the adtibody—”
THE DARK DOOR
by Alan E. Nourse
1
It was almost dark when he awoke, and lay on the bed, motionless and trembling, his heart sinking in the knowledge that he should never have slept. For almost half a minute, eyes wide with fear, he lay in the silence of the gloomy room, straining to hear some sound, some indication of their presence.
But the only sound was the barely audible hum of his wrist watch and the dismal splatter of raindrops on the cobbled street outside. There was no sound to feed his fear, yet he knew then, without a flicker of doubt, that they were going to kill him.
He shook his head, trying to clear the sleep from his brain as he turned the idea over and over in his mind. He wondered why he hadn’t realized it before, long before, back when they had first started this horrible, nerve- wracking cat-and-mouse game. The idea just hadn’t occurred to him. But he knew the game-playing was over. They wanted to kill him now. And he knew that ultimately they would kill him. There was no way for him to escape.
He sat up on the edge of the bed, painfully, perspiration standing out on his bare back, and he waited, listening. How could he have slept, exposing himself so helplessly? Every ounce of his energy, all the skill and wit and shrewdness at his command were necessary in this cruel hunt; yet he had taken the incredibly terrible chance of sleeping, of losing consciousness, leaving himself wide open and helpless against the attack which he knew was