Canis barked in enthusiastic agreement. Releasing the now useless throttle from his double paw grip Canis pushed himself into Kassad's chest in an acrobatic microgravity turn. In return Kassad embraced the animal in a single arm hug. "And you," Kassad said bringing his helmet and Canis' together, "I don't know how you did it, but I am going to find you the biggest steak in all of the Horsehead Nebula." A hearty round of barking voiced Canis' approval. Removing her helmet Greene was immediately struck by how much cleaner the air smelled, it was much colder too, but other things attracted her attention as well. "Is it just me or are the colors wrong?" Tapping the control to make his own helmet retract Kassad squinted at Canis, Sabha's control console, and his own hands. "Yes, like everything has gone slightly too bright and somewhat pastel." After a moment he added, "And I don't want to worry you, but it's like there are voices right at the periphery of my hearing." "I didn't want to say anything either, but I hear them too." Greene admitted. "Perhaps one of us should have the auto-medic take a look at us." Unbuckling and gently pushing his shoulder free of the restraints Kassad said, "I'm not going to argue with that." Canis barked and bounded out of the cockpit ahead of them. Chapter 16: "Broken" "Our next generation Omnicron automated medic system is the latest triumph in our long line of robotic life saving devices. Perfect for military, industrial, commercial, and private use the Omnicron is the first and last word in medical automation. No matter the species or injury you can't do more to ensure survival and recovery of your patient then to load them into one of our pods." -Product promotional blurb, Automated Medical Systems Incorporated As they gingerly made their way to the automated medic Greene asked. "Will we be safe? Can they follow us?" Kassad found the distraction from his physical woes too inviting to ignore. "Warp drives are fairly easy to follow. They leave trails like gaseous tunnels where they've scooped up and concentrated the interstellar gas along their course. Jump drives do leave telltale electromagnetic distortions that point in the right direction making it possible to follow a jump, but it takes a lot more time. Even in the worst case scenario we have twenty hours, more like days or weeks, if they haven't decided to be reasonable and just given up." Setting the medical machine to provide an assessment without performing unsolicited procedures Greene settled down onto the diagnostic bed while Kassad waited. Enclosing the patient to prevent interference with its work the machine swept its sensor equipped arms up and down Greene's body. Eventually the arms settled to focus on her head as specialist neural scanners were brought in to study the activity in her brain. After a long time the machine spoke in the absolutist masculine tone programmed into it. "Diagnosis complete, patient suffers from unknown form of neurological biochemical imbalance. Recommend patient be placed in stasis until treatment can be continued at a Primary Care and Research Facility." PC&Rs were where the very sick went. People with advanced or obscure conditions the medical machines were uncertain about got sent to a Primary Care and Research Facility. Much like the Code of Law the PC&Rs were defined by a set of basic rules agreed upon by the majority of Laniakea, and much like Lawships the demand was rare enough that not every world had one. Forcing himself to stop rubbing at his doubly injured shoulder Kassad inquired, "Is there any treatment for the symptoms until we reach a PC&R?" After a search of its database the machine explained, "An eighty four percent correlation treatment has been extrapolated from similar conditions on record. Weekly time release injections will return crew to minimum functionality. Side effects include numbness and psychological disassociation. Prolonged use of correlation treatment will result in permanent damage." This was the main reason Kassad had never replaced Sabha's aging automated medic with its worn manual controls and scuffed surface. Being a model built for military service it was able to formulate 'walking wounded' treatments for almost any malady. It could mix a cocktail capable of rendering a person cut in half able to perform basic tasks by disabling the self preservation limits imposed by biology. As such it wasn't a feature that Kassad used often or lightly, but being a one man show most of the time it was an option that provided some peace of mind. "Do it." Kassad ordered. "And make up a second shot for me." Underneath the diagnostic bed the automated medical unit's miniature chemical factory began manufacturing the requested medicine. "Maybe you should just put me in stasis?" Greene suggested while admitting privately that she was just trying to avoid dealing with the pain. Shaking his head Kassad rejected the idea. "If anything happens to me our passengers are going to need an advocate. There's a pretty good chance I'll be spending at least a little time incarcerated as this is all sorted out so that leaves you." "Won't they arrest me too?" Greene asked. "Unlikely." Kassad shrugged. "That's part of the captain being ultimately responsible. You're just a passenger, not a lot of responsibilities there so there's not really anything they can charge you with." As he spoke a slender mechanical arm extended from the automated medic to provide Greene's medicine and then Kassad leaned in tapping the device and saying, "Get that second shot up here, and give me something for a dislocated shoulder." Nonplused by the command the machine replied, "A dislocated limb will require full patient encasement." With emphasis on the word 'we' Kassad said, "We already reset it. I just want something for the pain." The machine was emotionlessly defiant."Non-localized analgesics will react negatively with current treatment. Recommend localized application of anti-inflammatory and four hours of sonic remediation of the affected area." Since there was no way Kassad was going to take himself out of action for four hours he replied, "Thanks for nothing." Sitting up, hooking her legs against the table to keep from drifting away, Greene looked around and at her hands before declaring, "I guess that's better." A second injection swung up and administered to Kassad who looked away saying, "I'll double check the navigation track, but this should keep us alive at least until we get to Mareville." With her mind back in the familiar ruts of life saving routine and procedure Greene asked, "Don't we need to bring the reactionless drive online first?" Rubbing at his arm where the injection had been made through his sleeve Kassad squeezed his eyes shut in an effort to focus and said, "This stuff doesn't help you think any clearer does it?" Looking around to see if he could spot Canis lurking nearby Kassad announced, "We also need to get Canis checked out." Gesturing to the diagnostic bed she was still sitting on Greene incredulously asked, "In this?" Kassad explained, "It's good for over four hundred species, although I did have to add canines in with a software patch." Not finding Canis anywhere nearby Kassad shouted sternly, "Canis, come." Concern gripped Greene. "You don't think he's having a worse reaction than we are?" Leaning out of the sickbay hatch Kassad scanned the area for Canis saying, "No, he just doesn't like the vet." Confused by the term Greene inquired, "The what?" Pulling himself through the sickbay entry Kassad shouted, "Canis you must have a physical exam my friend." Then acknowledging Greene he explained, "Vet, veterinarian that's what they call someone who provides medical care for animals." Thinking that perhaps this shed some light on the background of Sabha's captain Greene inquired, "Ah, did you grow up on a farm?" "No." Kassad replied without offering further explanation as he began poking his head into whatever hidey holes that Canis might have secreted himself into. "Help me find Canis, check the cargo hold, and be thorough. Last time I found him in wedged under the primary heat exchanger." Rather than head to the cargo hold Greene pointed to one of the tables in the lounge area saying, "I think I see a foot." Although the protruding hind foot immediately disappeared in response to its mention Kassad investigated cautiously knowing full well the dog could bolt. Canis was far more adept at maneuvering in zero gravity than anyone Kassad had ever met. This meant any escape avenues had to be covered for a quick grab. Drifting above the table with his feet to the nearest bulkhead ready to push off in pursuit Kassad peaked below. Canis responded to the intruding look with a low and rolling plaintive yowl that sounded like grumbling. In his most authoritative tones Kassad said, "This has to be done now, before we get to Mareville." To Greene's ears it sounded as if Canis' complaining yowl of response were meant to mimic terrestrial speech patterns. Kassad remained persistent. "You know post hazardous environmental exposure physicals are mandatory. What would they say about a captain derelict in looking after their crew's health?" Greene rolled her eyes at Canis' low moan of reply to Kassad's argument. "You know he can't really understand you." Carefully reaching one arm under the table Kassad dismissed Greene's cynical comment. "Yes, I'm sure he wedged himself under the table purely as a random response to something completely disconnected to my words." Before Greene could say anything more Canis exploded out from under the table as a ball of fur and loud barking. Kassad managed to grapple the hound with one hand then bring another arm around pulling Canis close to his chest. Their combined momentum left them spinning in mid air as Kassad cooed reassurances to the protesting barks from the wriggling animal. "You two are quite the sight." Greene said with her voice lost in the cacophony. Narrowly avoiding a mouth full of dog foot Kassad pleaded, "Lend a hand and haul us into sickbay." With a smirk Greene grabbed Kassad by one foot and while bracing herself with hand and foot holds pulled the two back into the sickbay. Aside from his vocal complaints there was very little resistance from Canis who allowed himself to be placed on the diagnostic table. The heart wrenching whining went on as the automated medic did its work. After a long examination the machine opened and announced, "All vital signs within normal range. Patient stress levels consistent with overwork. Recommend reduced shift hours." With its diagnosis complete the table opened and Canis bounded from the table and quickly out of sight as Greene asked, "The machine does know Canis is an animal right?" Cocking his head to one side Kassad massaged his bad shoulder absently with one hand and observed, "You're the only one arguing that point, and the machine is right. We all could use some down time." Cutting off Greene's complaint with one hand Kassad said, "We'll take a few hours to get right in the head before we attempt to bring the reactionless drive online. It's a tricky operation and we can't afford any mistakes out here." Opening her mouth to point out that they might not have time Greene stopped herself, internally conceding that any threat was best met with a clear head, said, "Fine, but I don't think I'll be able to sleep." Chapter 17: "Good Intentions" "Triple redundancy is the standard for all critical systems… except crew." -Old spacer's saying