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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of No Charge For Alterations, by H. L. Gold.
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's No Charge for Alterations, by Horace Leonard Gold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: No Charge for Alterations
+
+Author: Horace Leonard Gold
+
+Illustrator: H. Sharp
+
+Release Date: April 14, 2010 [EBook #31986]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>No Charge For Alterations</h1>
+
+<h2>By H. L. GOLD</h2>
+
+<h3><i>Illustrator</i>: H. Sharp</h3>
+
+<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Amazing Stories
+April-May 1953. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
+U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote"><p><i>"Wanta know what's wrong with women these days? Spoiled! The
+whole kit and kaboodle of 'em. They want to sing in nightclubs and hook
+up with some millionaire and wear beautiful clothes. Housework is
+something for gadgets to take care of, with maids to run the gadgets.
+Afraid to get a few calluses on their dainty hands!</i></p>
+
+<p>"<i>We got a way to handle that on Deneb. A girl gets highfalutin up
+there, the Doc puts her in the Ego Alter room. Thicken up her ankles a
+little, take some of the sparkle out of her eyes and hair, and you get a
+woman fit to pull a plow!</i>"</p>
+
+<p><i>Hold it, Madam! H. L. Gold said that; not us. Personally, we like
+girls&mdash;not Percherons!</i></p></div>
+
+
+<p>If there was one thing Dr. Kalmar hated, and there were many, it was
+having a new assistant fresh from a medical school on Earth. They always
+wanted to change things. They never realized that a planet develops its
+own techniques to meet its own requirements, which are seldom similar to
+those of any other world. Dr. Kalmar never got along with his assistants
+and he didn't expect to get along with this young Dr. Hoyt who was
+coming in on the transfer ship from Vega.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar had been trained on Earth himself, of course, but he
+wistfully remembered how he had revered Dr. Lowell when he had been
+Lowell's assistant. He'd known that his own green learning was no match
+for Dr. Lowell's wisdom and experience after 30 years on Deneb, and he
+had avidly accepted his lessons.</p>
+
+<p>Why, he grumbled to himself on his way to the spaceport to meet the
+unknown whippersnapper, why didn't Earth turn out young doctors the way
+it used to? They ought to have the arrogance knocked out of them before
+they left medical school. That's what must have happened to him, because
+his attitude had certainly been humble when he landed.</p>
+
+<p>The spaceport was jammed, naturally. Ship arrivals were infrequent
+enough to bring everybody from all over the planet who was not on duty
+at the farms, mines, factories, freight and passenger jets and all the
+rest of the busy activities of this comparatively new colony. They
+brought their lunches and families and stood around to watch. Dr. Kalmar
+went to the platform.</p>
+
+<p>The ship sat down on a mushroom of fire that swiftly became a flaming
+pancake and then was squashed out of existence.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm waiting for a shipment of livestock," enthused the man standing
+next to Dr. Kalmar.</p>
+
+<p>"You're lucky," the doctor said. "They can't talk back."</p>
+
+<p>The man looked at him sympathetically. "Meeting a female?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gabbier and more annoying," said Dr. Kalmar, but he didn't elaborate
+and the man, with the courtesy of the frontier, did not pry for an
+explanation.</p>
+
+<p>Livestock and freight came down on one elevator and passengers came down
+another. Slidewalks carried the cargo to Sterilization and travelers to
+the greeting platform. Dr. Kalmar felt his shoulders droop. The man with
+the medical bag had to be Dr. Hoyt and he was even more brisk, erect and
+muscular than Dr. Kalmar had expected, with a superior and inquisitive
+look that made the last assistant, unbearable as he'd been, seem as
+tractable as one of the arriving cows.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt spotted him instantly and came striding over to grab his hand
+in a grip like an ore-crusher. "You're Dr. Kalmar. Glad to know you. I'm
+sure we'll get along fine together. Miserable trip. Had to change ships
+four times to get here. Hope the food's better than shipboard slop. Got
+a nice hospital to work in? Do I live in or out?"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar was grudgingly forced to say rapidly, "Right. Likewise. I
+hope so. Too bad. Suits us. I think so. In."</p>
+
+<p>He got Dr. Hoyt into a jetcab and told the driver to make time back to
+the hospital. Appointments were piling up while he had to make the
+courtesy trip out to the spaceport, which was another nuisance. Now he'd
+have all of those and a talkative assistant who'd want to know the
+reasons for everything.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty barren," said Dr. Hoyt, looking out the window at the
+vegetationless ground below. "Why's that?"</p>
+
+<p>He'd known he was going to Deneb, Dr. Kalmar thought angrily. The least
+he could have done was read up on the place. <i>He</i> had.</p>
+
+<p>"It's an Earth-type planet," Dr. Kalmar said in a blunt voice, "except
+that life never developed on it. We had to bring everything&mdash;benign germ
+cultures, seed, animals, fish, insects&mdash;a whole ecology. Our farms are
+close to the cities. Too wasteful of freight to move them out very far.
+Another few centuries and we'll have a <i>real</i> population, millions of
+people instead of the 20,000 we have now in a couple of dozen
+settlements around this world. Then we'll have the whole place a nice
+shade of green."</p>
+
+<p>"City boy myself," said Dr. Hoyt. "Hate the country. Hydroponics and
+synthetic meat&mdash;that's the answer."</p>
+
+<p>"For Earth. It'll be a long time before we get that crowded here on
+Deneb."</p>
+
+<p>"Deneb," the young doctor repeated, dissatisfied. "That's the name of
+the star. You mean to tell me the planet has the same name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Most solar systems have only one Earth-type planet. It saves a lot of
+trouble to just call that planet Deneb, Vega or whatever."</p>
+
+<p>"Is <i>that</i> clutch of shacks the <i>city</i>?" exclaimed Dr. Hoyt.</p>
+
+<p>"Denebia," said Dr. Kalmar, beginning to enjoy himself finally.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, you could lose it in a suburb or Bosyorkdelphia!"</p>
+
+<p>"That monstrosity that used to be New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
+Rhode Island and Massachusetts? I wouldn't want to."</p>
+
+<p>He was pleased when Dr. Hoyt sank into stunned silence. If luck was with
+him, that stupefaction might last the whole day. It seemed as though it
+might, for the sight of the modest little hospital was too much for the
+youngster who had just come from the mammoth health factories of Earth.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt revived somewhat when he saw the patients waiting in the
+scantily furnished outer room, but Dr. Kalmar said, "Better get yourself
+settled," and opened a door for his immature colleague.</p>
+
+<p>"But there's only one bed in this room," Dr. Hoyt objected. "You must
+have made a mistake."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar, recalling the crowded cubicles of Earth, gave out a proud
+little dry laugh. "You're on Deneb now, boy. Here you'll have to get
+used to spaciousness. We like elbow room."</p>
+
+<p>The young doctor went in hesitantly, leaving the door open for a fast
+escape in case an error had been made. Dr. Kalmar had done the same when
+he'd arrived nine years ago. Judging by his own experience, it would
+take Dr. Hoyt a full six months to get used to having a room all to
+himself. There would be plenty of time to start showing him the ropes
+tomorrow, and in the meantime there were the backed-up appointments to
+be taken care of.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar went to his office and had his nurse, Miss Dupont, send in
+the first patient.</p>
+
+<p>It was a girl of 17, Avis Emery, who had been brought by her parents.
+She sat sullenly, dark-haired, too daintily pretty and delicately
+shapely for a frontier world like this, while Mr. Emery put the file
+from Social Control on the doctor's desk.</p>
+
+<p>"We're farmers&mdash;" the man began.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar interrupted, "The information is in the summary. Avis is to
+be assigned her mate next year, but she wants to go to Earth and become
+a nightclub singer. She refuses to marry a boy who'd be able to help
+around the farm, and she won't work on it herself."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus1.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>He looked up severely at the parents. "This is your own fault, you know.
+You pampered her. Farm labor is too valuable for pampering. We can't
+afford it."</p>
+
+<p>"You can blame me, Doc," said Mr. Emery miserably. "She's such a pretty
+little thing&mdash;I couldn't work her the way Sue and I work ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"And then she started getting notions," Mrs. Emery added, giving her
+husband a vicious glare. Dr. Kalmar could imagine the nights of argument
+and accusation before they were at last forced to go for medical help to
+solve their self-created problem. "Singing in nightclubs back on Earth,
+marrying a billionaire, living in a sky yacht!"</p>
+
+<p>"Avis," said Dr. Kalmar gently. "You know it's not that easy, don't you?
+There are lots and lots of pretty girls on Earth and very few
+billionaires. If you did get a job singing in a nightclub, you know
+you'd have to do some unpleasant things because there's so much
+competition for customers. Things like stripteasing, drinking at the
+tables and going out with whoever the owner tells you to."</p>
+
+<p>The girl's face grew animated for the first time. "Well, sure! Why do
+you think I want to go?"</p>
+
+<p>"And you don't love Deneb and your farm?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hate both of them!"</p>
+
+<p>"But you realize that we must have food. Doesn't it make you feel
+important to grow more food so we can increase our population?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! Why should I care? I want to go to Earth!"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar shook his head regretfully. He pushed a button on his desk.
+It was connected to a gravity generator directly under the girl's chair.
+Four gravities suddenly pushed her down into it and a hypodermic needle
+jabbed her swiftly with a hypnotic drug. She slumped. He released the
+button and the artificial gravity abated, but she remained dazed and
+relaxed.</p>
+
+<p>"You're not going to hurt her, are you, Doc?" Mr. Emery begged.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not. But I suppose you know Social Control's orders."</p>
+
+<p>They nodded, the husband gloomily, the wife with a single sharp jerk of
+her head.</p>
+
+<p>"You go right ahead and do it," she said. "I'm sick of working my
+fingers to the bone while she primps and preens and talks all the time
+about going to Earth."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, Avis," Dr. Kalmar said in a low, commanding voice.</p>
+
+<p>She stood up, blank-faced, and followed him out to the Ego Alter room.
+He closed the door, sat her down in the insulated seat next to the
+control console, put the wired plastic helmet on her and adjusted it to
+fit her skull snugly.</p>
+
+<p>Running his finger down the treatment sheet of her Social Control file,
+he set the dials according to its instructions. The psychic areas to be
+reduced were sex drive, competitiveness and imagination, while the areas
+of reproductive urge and cooperation were to be intensified. He
+regulated the individual timers and sent the varying charge through her
+brain.</p>
+
+<p>There was no reaction, no convulsion, no distortion of features. She sat
+there as if nothing had happened, but her personality had changed as
+completely as though she had been retrained from birth.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dupont came in without knocking. She knew, of course, that any
+patient in the Ego Alter room would be incapable of being disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>"Rephysical, Dr. Kalmar?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid so. Will you prepare her, please?"</p>
+
+<p>The nurse removed the girl's clothes. There was no resistance.</p>
+
+<p>"Such a lovely body," she said. "It's a shame."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged. "Until we have enough people and farms and industries, Miss
+Dupont, we'll just have to get used to altering people to fit the needs
+of our society. I'm sure you understand that."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but it still seems a shame. Bodies like that don't grow on trees."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus2.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>He gently moved the girl into the Rephysical Chamber. "They grow in this
+machine, though. As soon as we can afford it, which ought to be only a
+few hundred years from now, we can make any woman look like this, or
+even better."</p>
+
+<p>"And don't forget the men," Miss Dupont said as he started the
+mitogenetic generator. "We could use some Adonises around here."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll have them," he assured her.</p>
+
+<p>"Somebody will. None of us'll live that long."</p>
+
+<p>Working like a sculptor with a cathode in one hand and an anode in the
+other, Dr. Kalmar began reshaping the girl who stood fixedly in the
+boxlike chamber. The flesh fled from the cathode and chased after the
+anode as he broadened the fine nose, thickened the mobile lips, squared
+the slender jaw and drew out carefully the delicately arched orbital
+ridges.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll leave the curl in her hair," he said. "Every woman needs at least
+one feature she can be proud of."</p>
+
+<p>"You're telling me," Miss Dupont replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Synthetic tissue, please."</p>
+
+<p>She drew out a tube with a variable nozzle and started working just
+ahead of him. A spray of high-velocity cells shot through the girl's
+smooth skin at the neck, shoulders, breasts, hips and legs, forming
+shapeless lumps that he guided into cords and muscles. The slim figure
+quickly broadened, grew brawny and competent-looking, the body of a
+woman who could breed phenomenally while farming alongside her man.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar racked up the instruments and helped Miss Dupont dress the
+girl in coveralls and sandals. He felt the pride of craftsmanship when
+he found that the clothing supplied for her by Social Control exactly
+fitted her. He injected an antidote to the hypnotic and gave her the
+standard test for emotional response as her expressionless face cleared
+to placidity.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know where you are, Avis?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Ego Alter and Rephysical."</p>
+
+<p>"What have we done to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Changed me to fit my environment."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you resent being changed?"</p>
+
+<p>"No." She paused and looked worried. "Who's taking care of the crops
+while I'm here?"</p>
+
+<p>"They can wait till you and your parents get back, Avis. Let's show them
+the change, shall we?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," she said. "I think they'll be proud of me. This is how they
+always wanted me to be."</p>
+
+<p>"And you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I feel much better. As if I don't have to try so hard."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus3.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>"I'm glad, Avis. Miss Dupont, better have a sedative ready when her
+father sees her. I think he'll need it."</p>
+
+<p>"And her mother?" asked the nurse practically.</p>
+
+<p>"She'll probably want a drink to celebrate. Give her one."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar's prognosis was correct, only it didn't go far enough. His
+young assistant from Earth had come scooting out of his disquietingly
+large quarters and was jittering in the office when they entered.</p>
+
+<p>"Is <i>that</i> the pretty girl who was waiting when we came in?" he yelped
+in outrage. "What have you done to her?"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar gave the sedative to him instead of Mr. Emery, who was
+shocked, but had known in advance what to expect. Miss Dupont prepared
+another sedative quickly, gave Mrs. Emery a celebration drink and moved
+the family toward the door.</p>
+
+<p>"She looks fine, Doctor," the mother said happily. "Avis ought to be a
+big help around the house and farm from now on."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure she will," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"But she was so lovely!" wept Mr. Emery, though in a rapidly becalming
+voice as the sedative took effect.</p>
+
+<p>The door closed behind them.</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to be reported to the Medical Association back on Earth!" Dr.
+Hoyt said angrily. "Ruining a girl's looks like that!"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar sighed. He had hoped to be able to put off this orientation
+lecture until the following day, when there wouldn't be so many patients
+jamming his appointment book.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, let's get it over with. First, I was also trained on Earth
+and know how Ego Alter and Rephysical are used there: Ego Alter to
+remove psychic blocks so people can compete better, and Rephysical so
+they'll be more attractive. Second, we're not under the jurisdiction of
+Earth's Medical Association. Third, we'd damn well better not be,
+because our problems and solutions aren't the same at all."</p>
+
+<p>"You'd have been jailed for spoiling that girl's chances of a good
+marriage!"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't," Dr. Kalmar said quietly. "I improved them."</p>
+
+<p>"You did nothing of the&mdash;" Dr. Hoyt stopped. "Improved? How?"</p>
+
+<p>"I keep telling you this is a frontier world and you keep acting as if
+you understand, but you don't. Look, a family is an economic liability
+on Earth; it consumes without producing. That's why girls have so much
+trouble finding husbands there. Out here it's different. A family is an
+asset&mdash;if every member in it is willing to work."</p>
+
+<p>"But a pretty girl like that can always get by."</p>
+
+<p>"No Denebian can afford to marry a pretty girl. It's too risky. She
+can't work as hard as we do and still take care of her looks. And he'd
+worry about her constantly, which would cut into his efficiency. By
+having me make her a merely attractive girl in a wholesome, hearty way,
+Social Control guarantees more than just a marriage for her&mdash;it
+guarantees a contented married life."</p>
+
+<p>"Sweating away on a farm," Dr. Hoyt said.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that her anti-social strivings are gone, she'll realize that Deneb
+needs farmers instead of nightclub singers. She'll take pride in being a
+good worker, she'll raise as many children as she'll be capable of
+bearing, and she'll have a good husband and a prosperous farm. That
+wouldn't have satisfied her before. It will now. And she's better for it
+and so is Deneb."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt shook his head. "It's all upside down."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll get used to it. Why not take today off and explore Denebia? You
+need a rest after all those months in space."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe I will," said Dr. Hoyt vaguely, slightly anesthetized.</p>
+
+<p>"Good." Dr. Kalmar buzzed for Miss Dupont. "Send in the next patient,
+please. Oh, and Dr. Hoyt is taking the day off."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>But the young assistant was stunned into staying by the huge size of the
+Social Control file that was carried by the next patient, Mr. Fallon,
+and his wife.</p>
+
+<p>"I know just what you're thinking, Dr. Kalmar!" cried Mrs. Fallon
+distractedly, but with a nervously bright smile. "Those awful Fallons
+again! I don't blame you a bit, but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>As a matter of fact, that was exactly what Dr. Kalmar was thinking, plus
+the defeated feeling that they were all he needed to make the day
+complete.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord, what's in all those files?" Dr. Hoyt exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar could have explained, but he didn't feel up to it.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fallon, a wispy, shyly affable, poetic-looking chap, did it for him.
+"Papers," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that, but why so many?" Dr. Hoyt asked impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dupont seemed wryly amused as she watched his consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you might say it's because I can't make my mind up," confessed
+Mrs. Fallon with an uneasy giggle. She was a big woman who might have
+gurgled over a collection of toy dogs on Earth, but here she was a
+freight checker and her husband was a statistician in the Department of
+Supply, though on Earth he might have been anything from a composer to a
+social worker. "No matter how often we rephysical Harry, I always get
+tired of his looks in a few months."</p>
+
+<p>"And how often has that been done?" Dr. Hoyt demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it's eleven times. Isn't that right, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sweet," said Mr. Fallon. "Thirteen."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar could have interrupted, but he considered it wiser to let his
+assistant learn the hard way. Miss Dupont was enjoying it too much to
+interfere.</p>
+
+<p>"We've made him tall and we've made him short, skinny, fat, bulging with
+muscle, red hair, black hair, blond hair, gray hair&mdash;I don't know, just
+about everything in the book," said Mrs. Fallon, "and I simply can't
+seem to find one I'd like for keeps."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why the devil don't you get another husband?"</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fallon looked shocked. "Why, he was assigned to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Hoyt just came from Earth," Dr. Kalmar cut in at last, before a
+brawl could start. "He's not familiar with our methods."</p>
+
+<p>"Let's hear the cockeyed reason," Dr. Hoyt said resignedly.</p>
+
+<p>"We keep our population balanced," said Dr. Kalmar. "Too many of either
+sex creates tension, hostility, loss of efficiency; look at Earth if you
+want proof. We can't risk even a little of that, so we use prenatal sex
+control to keep them exactly equal."</p>
+
+<p>"There's a wife for every man," Mr. Fallon put in genially, "and a
+husband for every woman. Works out fine."</p>
+
+<p>"With no surplus," Dr. Kalmar added. "There are no floaters to allow the
+kind of marital moving day you have on Earth, where so many just up and
+shift over to new mates. We get ours for life. That's where Ego Alter
+and Rephysical come in."</p>
+
+<p>"You mean people bring in their mates to have them done over?"</p>
+
+<p>"If they're not satisfied and if the mates agree to be changed."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mind," said Mr. Fallon virtuously. "I figure Mabel will decide
+what she wants one of these changes, and then we can settle down and be
+happy with each other."</p>
+
+<p>"But what about you?" asked Dr. Hoyt, bewildered. "Don't you want her
+changed?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no. I like her fine just as she is."</p>
+
+<p>"You see now how it works?" Dr. Kalmar asked. "We can't have a variety
+of mates, but we can have all the variety we want in one mate. It comes
+to the same thing, as far as I can see, and causes much less confusion,
+especially since we need stable relationships."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt was striving heroically to stay indignant in spite of the
+sedative. "And do many ask to have their mates changed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I guess we're a sort of record, aren't we?" Mr. Fallon boasted.</p>
+
+<p>"I guess you are," agreed Dr. Kalmar. "And now, Dr. Hoyt, if there
+aren't any more questions, I'd like to proceed with this couple."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt stretched his eyes wide to keep them open. "It's all screwy to
+me, but it's none of my business. As soon as I finish my internship, I'm
+heading back to Earth, where things make sense, so I don't have to
+understand this mishmash you call a planet. Need help?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you'd find out what Mrs. Fallon has in mind this time, it would let
+me run the patients through a lot faster."</p>
+
+<p>"How would they feel about it?" Dr. Hoyt asked.</p>
+
+<p>"It's all right with me," Mr. Fallon said amiably. "I'm pretty used to
+this, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"But what are we going to make you look like, Harry?" his wife fretted.
+"I felt very jealous of other women when you were handsome and I didn't
+like you just ordinary-looking."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not go through the model book with Dr. Hoyt?" suggested Dr. Kalmar.
+"There are still some types you haven't tried."</p>
+
+<p>"There <i>are</i>?" she asked in gratified astonishment. "Would you mind very
+much, Dr. Hoyt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Glad to," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dupont brought out the model book for him, and he and Mrs. Fallon
+studied the facial and physical types that were very explicitly
+illustrated there in three-dimensional full color. Mr. Fallon,
+contentedly working out math problems on a sheet of paper, left the
+choice entirely to her.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Meanwhile, Dr. Kalmar and Miss Dupont swiftly took care of a succession
+of other patients, raising the tolerance level of frustration in a
+watchmaker, replating the acne-pitted skin of a sensitive youth,
+restoring a finger lost in a machine-shop accident, and building up
+good-natured aggression in an ore miner whose productivity had slumped.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Fallon still hadn't decided when the last patient had been taken
+care of. She said unhappily, "I don't know. I simply absolutely don't
+know. Couldn't you suggest <i>something</i>, Dr. Hoyt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wouldn't be ethical," he told her bluntly. "Not allowed to."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar, checking the Social Control papers with Miss Dupont,
+wondered if he should interfere. It would lower confidence in Dr. Hoyt,
+which meant that people would insist on Dr. Kalmar's treating them.
+Then, instead of having an assistant to remove some of the load, he'd
+have to do the work of two men. He decided to let the young doctor
+handle it.</p>
+
+<p>But Dr. Hoyt stood up in exasperation, slammed the book shut, and said,
+"Mrs. Fallon, if you know what you want, I'll be glad to oblige. But I'm
+not a telepathy&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anything I can do?" Dr. Kalmar interrupted quickly, before his
+assistant could create any more damage.</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't have to get huffy," Mrs. Fallon said indignantly. "All I
+asked for was a suggestion or two."</p>
+
+<p>"Insult my wife, will he?" Mr. Fallon belligerently added.</p>
+
+<p>"It's my fault," Dr. Kalmar said. "Dr. Hoyt just got in today from Earth
+and he's tired and he naturally doesn't understand all our ways yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Yet?</i>" Dr. Hoyt repeated in disgust. "What makes you think I'll
+ever&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And I shouldn't have burdened him with this problem until he's had a
+chance to rest up and look around," Dr. Kalmar continued in a slightly
+louder voice. "Now, let's see if we can't settle this problem before
+closing time, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>The Fallons subsided, Dr. Hoyt watched with a sarcastic eye, though he
+kept silent as Dr. Kalmar and Miss Dupont, working as a shrewd team,
+gave them the suggestion they had been looking for. It was all done very
+smoothly, so smoothly that Dr. Kalmar felt professional pride because
+even his stiff-necked assistant was unable to detect the fact that it
+<i>was</i> a suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar got Mrs. Fallon to reminisce about the alterations her
+husband had undergone, and Miss Dupont promptly agreed with her when she
+explained why each had been unsatisfactory. It took some time, but he
+eventually brought her back to what Mr. Fallon had looked like when
+she'd first married him.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, isn't that the strangest thing?" she said, puzzled. "I can't
+remember. Can you, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's a little mixed up," Mr. Fallon admitted. "Let's see, I know I was
+taller and I think I had a long, thin face&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we don't have to guess," Dr. Kalmar said. "Nurse, we have the
+information on file, don't we?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Doctor," she said, and instantly produced a photograph. They
+evidently thought it was merely filing efficiency; they hadn't noticed
+her searching for the picture quietly while Dr. Kalmar had been leading
+them on. He had, in fact, delayed asking her until she'd nodded to
+indicate that she had found it.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fallon frowned as if he'd recognized the face but couldn't remember
+the name. His wife gave a little shriek of admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Harry, you looked perfectly wonderful!"</p>
+
+<p>"Those deep dimples made shaving pretty hard," he recalled.</p>
+
+<p>"But they're <i>darling</i>! Why did you ever let me change you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I wanted you to be happy, sweet."</p>
+
+<p>It was as simple as that&mdash;a bit of practical psychology based on
+knowledge of the patients. Dr. Kalmar wished wistfully that old Dr.
+Lowell had been there to observe. He would have approved, which might
+have made up for Dr. Hoyt's unpleasant expression.</p>
+
+<p>"I hope this is the one you want," Dr. Kalmar said as he took them to
+the front door after the rephysical.</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness, I hope so!" Mrs. Fallon exclaimed. She looked fondly at her
+husband, and this time had to look up to see his face. "I'm almost
+<i>positive</i> this is what I want Harry to be."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if it isn't, sweet," Mr. Fallon said, "we'll try something else.
+I don't mind as long as it makes you happy."</p>
+
+<p>They closed the door behind them, leaving the hospital empty of all but
+the small staff.</p>
+
+<p>"They're crazy!" Dr. Hoyt exploded. "He's not the one we should be
+changing. That idiotic female needs a good Ego Alter!"</p>
+
+<p>"He hasn't asked for it," Dr. Kalmar pointed out patiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Then he ought to!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's his decision, isn't it? There's such a thing as ethics, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>"I've never seen anything more insane than the way you work," snapped
+Dr. Hoyt. "I can't wait to finish my stretch here and go home."</p>
+
+<p>He stamped out, weaving slightly because of the sedative.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what do you think of our assistant?" asked Dr. Kalmar.</p>
+
+<p>"He's cute," Miss Dupont said irrationally.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar glowered at her. He'd forgotten that she was due to have a
+mate assigned to her this year.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Routine at the hospital was anything but routine. Dr. Hoyt barely kept
+from yelping each time someone was treated, and his help was given so
+unwillingly that Dr. Kalmar, sweating under a double load and with Dr.
+Hoyt to argue with at the same time, was all for putting him on the ship
+and asking Earth for another intern. But Miss Dupont talked him out of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>For no discernible reason other than loneliness, Dr. Hoyt was taking her
+out. She was pleased, even though he crabbed constantly about the
+shabby-looking clothes she wore, which were typical of Deneb, and the
+way they fitted her.</p>
+
+<p>Either the two of them didn't talk shop, or she had no influence with
+him&mdash;his criticism and impatience grew sharper each week.</p>
+
+<p>It bothered Dr. Kalmar more than he thought it should, and much more
+than Mrs. Kalmar wanted it to. She was a pleasant little woman who liked
+things as they were, which was why Dr. Kalmar had hesitated all this
+while to ask her to undergo a slight rephysical; he would have preferred
+her a little taller, more filled out, her slight wrinkles deleted and,
+while he was thinking about it, he wished she'd let him give her
+space-black hair instead of her indeterminately blondish mop. But he'd
+rather have her as she was than peevish, so he had never mentioned it.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let the boy upset you, she said. "It's only that he's so young
+and inexperienced. You can't expect him to adjust quickly to a new
+environment and a whole new medical orientation."</p>
+
+<p>"But that's just what annoys me! Why, I used to hang onto every word of
+Dr. Lowell's when I came here! I never thought I knew better than he
+did."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, dear, you're you and Dr. Lowell is Dr. Lowell and Dr. Hoyt is Dr.
+Hoyt."</p>
+
+<p>He tried to think of an answer and couldn't. "I suppose so."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe you'd feel better if you spoke to Dr. Lowell about it."</p>
+
+<p>"What could he do? This is really an internal problem that I should work
+out with Dr. Hoyt. I can't involve Dr. Lowell in it."</p>
+
+<p>But it became intolerable when there was a young girl who wanted to be a
+boy and Dr. Kalmar and Dr. Hoyt got into the worst battle yet.
+Naturally, she had to be given an Ego Alter to make her happy about
+being a girl, whereas Dr. Hoyt argued that she should be allowed to be a
+boy if that was what she wanted. Dr. Kalmar explained angrily once more
+that the sexes were exactly balanced and Dr. Hoyt quoted the rule of
+personal choice. It was applicable on Earth, but not on Deneb, Dr.
+Kalmar retorted, to which Dr. Hoyt snorted something about playing God.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar confessed harshly to his wife that she was right. He had to
+bring old Dr. Lowell into the situation; it was out of Dr. Kalmar's
+control and was keeping the hospital in a turmoil. It was time for Dr.
+Lowell to inspect the hospital, the job he had taken in place of actual
+retirement. Dr. Kalmar needed help from Miss Dupont to bring the problem
+out into the open. But she became unexpectedly obstinate.</p>
+
+<p>"I won't hurt Leo's career," she explained flatly.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar gave her a vacant look. "Leo?"</p>
+
+<p>She blushed. "Dr. Hoyt. He's honestly trying to understand, but he finds
+it so different from Earth. Practically everything we do here is in
+reverse."</p>
+
+<p>"But so is our environment, Miss Dupont. Earth is over-crowded and Deneb
+is under-populated, so of course our methods would be the opposite of
+Earth's. He has to be made to see that we must solve our problems our
+own way."</p>
+
+<p>She studied his face suspiciously. "That's all you want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. Damn it, do you think I want him fired and sent back to
+Earth before his internship's up? I know it would hurt his record.
+Besides, I need an assistant&mdash;but not one I have to bicker with every
+time I make a move."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, in that case&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Good girl. All you have to do is help me hold off the cases he'd argue
+about until Dr. Lowell gets here." He stared down glumly at his hands,
+which were gripping each other tightly. "God knows I'm no diplomat. Dr.
+Lowell is. He convinced me easily enough when I came here. Maybe he can
+do the same with Dr. Hoyt."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I hope he can," Miss Dupont said earnestly. "I want so much to have
+you and Leo work together in harmony."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced up, curious. "Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I'm in love with him."</p>
+
+<p>He found himself nodding bitterly. Having Dr. Hoyt go back to Earth
+wouldn't be a fraction as bad as Miss Dupont leaving with him. So now
+there was something else to worry about.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell came bouncing out of the jetcab a few days later. "The
+hospital better be spotless!" he called out jovially, paying off the
+hackie. "I'm in a mean mood. Liable to suspend everybody."</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange lift to Dr. Kalmar's spirits as the old man entered
+the office. He wished without hope that he could inspire the same sort
+of reverence and respect. Impossible, of course. Dr. Lowell was great;
+he himself was nothing more than competent.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar introduced his young assistant to the old man.</p>
+
+<p>"Young and strong," Dr. Lowell approved. "That's what we need on Deneb.
+Skill is important, but health and youth even more so."</p>
+
+<p>"For those who stay," said Dr. Hoyt frostily. "I'm not."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar felt himself quiver with rage. The wet-nosed pup couldn't
+talk to Dr. Lowell like that!</p>
+
+<p>But Dr. Lowell was saying cheerily, "You seem to have made up your mind
+to go back. No matter. Some decisions are like egg-shells&mdash;made only to
+be broken. I hope that's what you'll do with yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Not a chance," Dr. Hoyt said. He didn't take the arrogant expression
+off his face even when Miss Dupont looked at him pleadingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I say let's signal the next ship&mdash;" Dr. Kalmar began.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell cut in quickly, "You two have patients to attend to, I see.
+Don't worry about me. I know my way around this poor little wretch of a
+building. Not much like Earth hospitals, is it?" He headed for the
+medical supply room, adding just before he went in, "A lot can be said
+for small installations. The personal touch, you know."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar enviously realized how deftly the old man had put the
+youngster in his place, whereas he would have stood there and slugged it
+out verbally. Lord, if he could only acquire that awesome wisdom!</p>
+
+<p>"Well, back to work," he said, trying to imitate the cheeriness at
+least.</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, let's ruin some more lives," Dr. Hoyt almost snarled.</p>
+
+<p>"Leo, <i>please</i>!" whispered Miss Dupont imploringly.</p>
+
+<p>Five minutes later the two doctors were furiously arguing over a very
+old man who had been sent by Social Control to have his eyesight
+strengthened.</p>
+
+<p>"You have no right to let anybody dodder around like this!" Dr. Hoyt
+yelled. "What in hell is Rephysical for if not for such cases?"</p>
+
+<p>"You probably think we ought to make him look like 25 again," Dr. Kalmar
+yelled back. "If that's all you've learned working here&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Now, now," said Dr. Lowell soothingly. He'd come in unnoticed by either
+of the men. "Dr. Hoyt is right, of course. We <i>would</i> like to make old
+people young and some day we'll be able to afford it. But not for some
+time to come."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" Dr. Hoyt demanded in a lower tone, visibly flattered by Dr.
+Lowell's seemingly taking his side.</p>
+
+<p>"Rephysical can't actually make anyone young. It can only give the
+outward appearance of youth and replace obviously diseased parts. But an
+old body is an old organism; it has to break down eventually. If we give
+it more vigor than it can endure, it breaks down too soon, much sooner
+than if we let it age normally. That represents economic loss as well as
+a humanitarian one."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't follow you," Dr. Hoyt said bewilderedly.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, our patient used to be a machinist. A good one. Now he's only
+able to be an oiler. A good one, too, when you improve his eyesight. He
+can go on doing that for years, performing a useful function. But he'd
+wear himself out in no time as a machinist again if you de-aged him."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that supposed to make sense?"</p>
+
+<p>"It does," said Dr. Lowell, "for Deneb."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt wanted to continue the discussion, but Dr. Lowell was already
+on his way to inspect another part of the hospital. Grumbling, the young
+man helped chart the optical nerves that had to be replaced and measure
+the new curve of the retinas ordered by Social Control.</p>
+
+<p>But he fought just as strenuously over other cases, especially a retired
+freight-jet pilot who had to have his reflexes slowed down so he could
+become a contented meteorologist. Whenever there was a loud disagreement
+of this sort, Dr. Lowell was there to mediate calmly.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>At the end of the day, Dr. Kalmar was emotionally exhausted. He said as
+he and Dr. Lowell were washing up, "The kid's hopeless. I thought you
+could straighten him out&mdash;God knows I couldn't&mdash;but he'll never see why
+we have to work the way we do."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you suggest?" Dr. Lowell asked through a towel.</p>
+
+<p>"Send him back to Earth. Get an intern who's more malleable."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell tossed the towel into the sterilizer. "Can't be done. We're
+expanding so fast all over the Galaxy that Earth can't train and ship
+out enough doctors for the new colonies. If we sent him back, I don't
+know when we'd get another."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar swallowed. "You mean it's him or nobody?"</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid so."</p>
+
+<p>"But he'll never fit in on Deneb!"</p>
+
+<p>"You did," Dr. Lowell said.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar tried to smile modestly. "I realized immediately how little I
+knew and how much more experience you had. I was willing to learn. Why,
+I used to listen to you and watch you work and try to see your reasons
+for doing things&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You think so?" asked Dr. Lowell.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar glanced at him in astonishment. "You know I did. I still do,
+for that matter."</p>
+
+<p>"When you landed on Deneb," said Dr. Lowell, "you were the most
+stubborn, opinionated young ass I'd ever met."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar's smile became an appreciative grin. "Damn, I wish I had that
+light touch of yours!"</p>
+
+<p>"You were so dogmatic and argumentative that Dr. Hoyt is a suggestible
+schoolboy in comparison."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you don't have to go that far," Dr. Kalmar said. "I get what
+you're driving at&mdash;every intern needs orientation and I should be more
+patient and understanding."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you don't follow me at all," stated Dr. Lowell. "Invite Dr. Hoyt,
+Miss Dupont and me to your house for dinner tonight and maybe you'll get
+a better idea of what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything for a free meal, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"And to keep a doctor here on Deneb that we'd lose otherwise."</p>
+
+<p>"Implying that I can't do it."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that the decision you'd come to?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I guess it is," Dr. Kalmar confessed. "All right, how about dinner
+at my house tonight? I'll round up the other two and call Harriet so
+she'll expect us."</p>
+
+<p>"Delighted to come," said Dr. Lowell. "Nice of you to ask me."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dupont was elated at the invitation and Dr. Hoyt said he had
+nothing else to do anyway. On the videophone Mrs. Kalmar was dismayed
+for a moment, until Dr. Lowell told her to put through an emergency
+order to Central Commissary and he'd verify it.</p>
+
+<p>That was when Dr. Kalmar realized how serious the old man was. On a raw
+planet where crises were everyday routine, a situation had to be
+catastrophic before it could be called an emergency.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Dinner on Deneb was the same as anywhere else in the Galaxy. To free
+women for other work, food was delivered weekly in cooked form. A
+special messenger from Central Commissary had brought the emergency
+rations and Mrs. Kalmar had simply punctured the self-heat cartridges
+and put the servings in front of each guest; the containers were
+disposable plates and came with single-use plastic utensils. No garbage,
+no preparation, no cleaning up afterward, except to toss them all into
+the converter furnace. Dr. Hoyt was still not accustomed to wholly grown
+foods; he'd been raised on synthetics, of course, which were the staples
+on Earth.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that was good," said Dr. Lowell, getting up from the table with
+his round little belly comfortably expanded. "Now, let's have a few
+drinks before we start a professional bull session. Where do you keep
+your liquor? I'd like to mix my special so Dr. Hoyt can see we colonials
+are not so provincial."</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord, I haven't had your special for years!" exclaimed Dr. Kalmar.
+"Since about the time I came to Deneb, in fact."</p>
+
+<p>"That's why it's a special. Reserved for state occasions, such as
+arrivals of colleagues from our dear old home planet."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you don't have to go to all that bother," said Dr. Hoyt. "You'd
+have to make it twice&mdash;once now and once when I leave."</p>
+
+<p>"That won't be for quite a while, will it?" Miss Dupont asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"As soon as I finish my internship. No more alien worlds for me. I like
+Earth."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kalmar got him to talk about it, which was much easier than getting
+him to stop, while Dr. Kalmar showed the old man where the liquor stock
+and fixings were kept. Watching him mix the ingredients with a chemist's
+care, Dr. Kalmar felt a glow of nostalgia. He recalled the celebration
+at Dr. Lowell's house, several months after he had come from Earth, when
+he'd enjoyed himself so much that he'd passed out. It was one of the
+pleasanter memories of his start on Deneb.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't mix them all in a single batch," Dr. Lowell explained, bringing
+the drinks over one at a time as he finished preparing them. "Mrs.
+Kalmar ... Miss Dupont ... our gracious host, Dr. Kalmar ... and now Dr.
+Hoyt and myself." He lifted his glass at Dr. Hoyt. "Welcome to our
+latest associate&mdash;product, like ourselves, of the great medical schools
+of Earth. It's a forlorn hope, but may he learn as much from us about
+our peculiar methods as we learn from him about the latest terrestrial
+advances."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt, smiling as if he didn't think it possible, stood up when
+they'd downed their toast to him. "To Earth," he said. "May I get back
+in record time." He gulped it, said, "Delicious&mdash;for a colonial drink,"
+and froze with his smile as fixed as if it had been painted on.</p>
+
+<p>"Leo!" Miss Dupont cried, and shook him, but he stayed frozen.</p>
+
+<p>"The man's allergic to alcohol!" said Dr. Kalmar, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>"Do something!" Mrs. Kalmar begged. "Don't let him stand there like
+that! He&mdash;he looks like a petrified man!"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't get panicky," said Dr. Lowell in a quiet, confident voice.
+"That's when you passed out, Dr. Kalmar. Right after your first taste of
+my special."</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>we</i> haven't," Dr. Kalmar objected.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally. Your drinks weren't drugged."</p>
+
+<p>"Drugged?" shrieked Miss Dupont. "You doped him?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's rather obvious, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;what for?" Dr. Kalmar stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"Same reason I slipped you a mickey not long after you got here. We
+can't take any chances that he'll ship back to Earth. You see?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't," raged Miss Dupont. "I think it's a cheap, dirty, foul trick
+and it won't work, either. You can't <i>keep</i> him drugged."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like you talking to Dr. Lowell like that," said Dr. Kalmar
+indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You should be the last one to object," Mrs. Kalmar pointed out. "He
+said he drugged you, too."</p>
+
+<p>"I know," Dr. Kalmar said blankly. "I don't understand&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You will," promised Dr. Lowell. "Just come along and don't interfere.
+Better give him the order; it'll keep things straighter."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Kalmar was grimly disapproving and Miss Dupont was close to
+hysteria. Only Dr. Kalmar retained his awed respect for Dr. Lowell. If
+the old man said it was all right, it was, even if he couldn't see the
+reason.</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead," urged Dr. Lowell.</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Hoyt!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Dr. Kalmar?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will come with us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, Dr. Kalmar."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell took them back to the hospital.</p>
+
+<p>"Now what?" asked Dr. Kalmar.</p>
+
+<p>"You actually don't know?" Miss Dupont demanded. "He wants to put Leo
+through the Ego Alter."</p>
+
+<p>"That's absurd," Dr. Kalmar said angrily, "and an outright slander. Dr.
+Lowell wouldn't consider such a thing&mdash;the boy didn't ask for it and it
+wasn't authorized by Social Control."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell smiled genially and opened the door to the Ego Alter room. "I
+hate to disillusion you, Dr. Kalmar. That's exactly what I have in
+mind&mdash;the same thing I did to you."</p>
+
+<p>"That's absurd," Dr. Kalmar repeated, but with less conviction and more
+confusion than before.</p>
+
+<p>"It worked. Tell him to sit down."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar did, and automatically fitted the wired plastic helmet to Dr.
+Hoyt's head.</p>
+
+<p>"You can't!" cried Miss Dupont as he reached for the dials on the
+control console. "It's not fair!"</p>
+
+<p>"Let's not get involved in a discussion on ethics," Dr. Lowell said.
+"Deneb can't afford to lose him; we need every doctor we have. If he
+goes back to Earth it may be years before we get a replacement."</p>
+
+<p>"But you can't do it without his consent!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's time for that later," the old man grinned. "Keep his eyes on
+you, Dr. Kalmar, while you build up his father image. Cut down on
+hostility, aggression and power drive. Boost social responsibility and
+adventurousness. But make sure he's looking at you constantly."</p>
+
+<p>"I won't allow it," said Mrs. Kalmar flatly. "You won't make my husband
+violate his oath."</p>
+
+<p>"I did it to him, didn't I?" Dr. Lowell replied jovially. "It got you a
+husband."</p>
+
+<p>Miss Dupont grabbed at Dr. Kalmar's hand, but he had already turned on
+the current.</p>
+
+<p>"Anything else?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, he has to get married, of course," Dr. Lowell said. "Let him look
+at Miss Dupont&mdash;she's scheduled for this year, isn't she?&mdash;while you
+give him a shot of mating urge. Now, wipe out the memory of this
+incident and put him on a joy jag. We can validate that by liquoring him
+up afterward. When you're finished, bring him to."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Hoyt came out of it almost with a whoop. He lurched out of the
+insulated seat, stared at Miss Dupont for a moment with eyes that almost
+glittered, and seized and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>"My goodness!" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what were you saying about ethics?" Dr. Lowell asked.</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. Both Miss Dupont and Mrs. Kalmar had frozen.</p>
+
+<p>"You drugged them, too?" Dr. Kalmar weakly wanted to know.</p>
+
+<p>"A bit slower-acting," admitted the old man. "All you have to do with
+them is wipe out the last half hour. Don't want any witnesses to an
+unethical act, you know. Oh, and put them on a jag also."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar followed instructions.</p>
+
+<p>Finished, they left the three uproariously drunk in the waiting room and
+went to wash up. Dr. Kalmar went along bewilderedly. The old man was as
+unconcerned as if he did this sort of thing daily.</p>
+
+<p>"I was as arrogant and belligerent as this squirt was?"</p>
+
+<p>"Worse," Dr. Lowell said. "He was willing to finish out his internship.
+You weren't. Still worried about the ethics?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Naturally."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, apply some logic, then. Are you happier on Deneb than you'd
+have been on Earth?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, certainly. I'd have been lucky to get a job doctoring in a summer
+camp. I wouldn't trade a roomy planet like this for the jammed cubicles
+of Earth. And I like our methods better than terrestrial dogma. But
+those are my preferences. I can't inflict them on anybody else."</p>
+
+<p>"The hell they were your preferences. You bickered more about our
+methods and longed more loudly for the tenements of Earth than this lad
+ever did. All it took was a slight Ego Alter and you have a happier life
+than you would have had. Right?"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar felt his tension ease. If the old man said it was right, it
+was. He became momentarily resentful when he realized that that reaction
+had been installed by Dr. Lowell, but then he smiled. It really was
+right. A bit arbitrary, perhaps, but for the good of Dr. Hoyt and Deneb
+in the long run, just as it had been for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"Look," he said, drying his arms. "I've been wanting my wife to go
+through a slight rephysical."</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you ask her?"</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is that I'm afraid she'll think I'm dissatisfied and I don't
+want her to get resentful."</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe she'd like you to do some changing, too."</p>
+
+<p>"What for? I'm all right."</p>
+
+<p>"She probably feels the same way about herself."</p>
+
+<p>"But all I want are a few changes in her. She's as high as a space pilot
+now. It would be a cinch to&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Lowell flung down the towel and gave him an outraged glare. "There's
+such a thing as professional ethics, Dr. Kalmar!"</p>
+
+<p>"But you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"That's different. It was a social decision, not a selfish one. If you
+ask her and she agrees, that's up to her. But you can't take advantage
+of her in an egocentric, arbitrary way. You just try it and I'll have
+you sent back to Earth."</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar felt his knees grow weak in alarm. "No, no. It's not that
+important. Just an insignificant kind of wish."</p>
+
+<p>And it was, he discovered when they went out to the waiting room. Unused
+to jags, Mrs. Kalmar was more affectionate than she'd been since they
+were first married; he'd have to remember to go on them periodically
+with her. Miss Dupont, unwilling to budge out of Dr. Hoyt's tight arms,
+had glassily joyous eyes. Dr. Hoyt didn't let her go until he caught
+sight of Dr. Kalmar.</p>
+
+<p>"Greatest doctor I ever met," he said enthusiastically. "Won'ful planet,
+Deneb. Just wanna marry Miss Dupont, stay here and learn at your feet.
+Okay?"</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kalmar's glance at the old man was no less worshipful. "It couldn't
+be okayer," he said.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg's No Charge for Alterations, by Horace Leonard Gold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: No Charge for Alterations
+
+Author: Horace Leonard Gold
+
+Illustrator: H. Sharp
+
+Release Date: April 14, 2010 [EBook #31986]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NO CHARGE FOR ALTERATIONS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ No Charge For Alterations
+
+ By H. L. GOLD
+
+ _Illustrator_: H. Sharp
+
+[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from Amazing Stories
+April-May 1953. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
+U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+
+
+[Sidenote: _"Wanta know what's wrong with women these days? Spoiled! The
+whole kit and kaboodle of 'em. They want to sing in nightclubs and hook
+up with some millionaire and wear beautiful clothes. Housework is
+something for gadgets to take care of, with maids to run the gadgets.
+Afraid to get a few calluses on their dainty hands!_
+
+"_We got a way to handle that on Deneb. A girl gets highfalutin up
+there, the Doc puts her in the Ego Alter room. Thicken up her ankles a
+little, take some of the sparkle out of her eyes and hair, and you get a
+woman fit to pull a plow!_"
+
+_Hold it, Madam! H. L. Gold said that; not us. Personally, we like
+girls--not Percherons!_]
+
+
+If there was one thing Dr. Kalmar hated, and there were many, it was
+having a new assistant fresh from a medical school on Earth. They always
+wanted to change things. They never realized that a planet develops its
+own techniques to meet its own requirements, which are seldom similar to
+those of any other world. Dr. Kalmar never got along with his assistants
+and he didn't expect to get along with this young Dr. Hoyt who was
+coming in on the transfer ship from Vega.
+
+Dr. Kalmar had been trained on Earth himself, of course, but he
+wistfully remembered how he had revered Dr. Lowell when he had been
+Lowell's assistant. He'd known that his own green learning was no match
+for Dr. Lowell's wisdom and experience after 30 years on Deneb, and he
+had avidly accepted his lessons.
+
+Why, he grumbled to himself on his way to the spaceport to meet the
+unknown whippersnapper, why didn't Earth turn out young doctors the way
+it used to? They ought to have the arrogance knocked out of them before
+they left medical school. That's what must have happened to him, because
+his attitude had certainly been humble when he landed.
+
+The spaceport was jammed, naturally. Ship arrivals were infrequent
+enough to bring everybody from all over the planet who was not on duty
+at the farms, mines, factories, freight and passenger jets and all the
+rest of the busy activities of this comparatively new colony. They
+brought their lunches and families and stood around to watch. Dr. Kalmar
+went to the platform.
+
+The ship sat down on a mushroom of fire that swiftly became a flaming
+pancake and then was squashed out of existence.
+
+"I'm waiting for a shipment of livestock," enthused the man standing
+next to Dr. Kalmar.
+
+"You're lucky," the doctor said. "They can't talk back."
+
+The man looked at him sympathetically. "Meeting a female?"
+
+"Gabbier and more annoying," said Dr. Kalmar, but he didn't elaborate
+and the man, with the courtesy of the frontier, did not pry for an
+explanation.
+
+Livestock and freight came down on one elevator and passengers came down
+another. Slidewalks carried the cargo to Sterilization and travelers to
+the greeting platform. Dr. Kalmar felt his shoulders droop. The man with
+the medical bag had to be Dr. Hoyt and he was even more brisk, erect and
+muscular than Dr. Kalmar had expected, with a superior and inquisitive
+look that made the last assistant, unbearable as he'd been, seem as
+tractable as one of the arriving cows.
+
+Dr. Hoyt spotted him instantly and came striding over to grab his hand
+in a grip like an ore-crusher. "You're Dr. Kalmar. Glad to know you. I'm
+sure we'll get along fine together. Miserable trip. Had to change ships
+four times to get here. Hope the food's better than shipboard slop. Got
+a nice hospital to work in? Do I live in or out?"
+
+Dr. Kalmar was grudgingly forced to say rapidly, "Right. Likewise. I
+hope so. Too bad. Suits us. I think so. In."
+
+He got Dr. Hoyt into a jetcab and told the driver to make time back to
+the hospital. Appointments were piling up while he had to make the
+courtesy trip out to the spaceport, which was another nuisance. Now he'd
+have all of those and a talkative assistant who'd want to know the
+reasons for everything.
+
+"Pretty barren," said Dr. Hoyt, looking out the window at the
+vegetationless ground below. "Why's that?"
+
+He'd known he was going to Deneb, Dr. Kalmar thought angrily. The least
+he could have done was read up on the place. _He_ had.
+
+"It's an Earth-type planet," Dr. Kalmar said in a blunt voice, "except
+that life never developed on it. We had to bring everything--benign germ
+cultures, seed, animals, fish, insects--a whole ecology. Our farms are
+close to the cities. Too wasteful of freight to move them out very far.
+Another few centuries and we'll have a _real_ population, millions of
+people instead of the 20,000 we have now in a couple of dozen
+settlements around this world. Then we'll have the whole place a nice
+shade of green."
+
+"City boy myself," said Dr. Hoyt. "Hate the country. Hydroponics and
+synthetic meat--that's the answer."
+
+"For Earth. It'll be a long time before we get that crowded here on
+Deneb."
+
+"Deneb," the young doctor repeated, dissatisfied. "That's the name of
+the star. You mean to tell me the planet has the same name?"
+
+"Most solar systems have only one Earth-type planet. It saves a lot of
+trouble to just call that planet Deneb, Vega or whatever."
+
+"Is _that_ clutch of shacks the _city_?" exclaimed Dr. Hoyt.
+
+"Denebia," said Dr. Kalmar, beginning to enjoy himself finally.
+
+"Why, you could lose it in a suburb or Bosyorkdelphia!"
+
+"That monstrosity that used to be New York, Pennsylvania, Connecticut,
+Rhode Island and Massachusetts? I wouldn't want to."
+
+He was pleased when Dr. Hoyt sank into stunned silence. If luck was with
+him, that stupefaction might last the whole day. It seemed as though it
+might, for the sight of the modest little hospital was too much for the
+youngster who had just come from the mammoth health factories of Earth.
+
+Dr. Hoyt revived somewhat when he saw the patients waiting in the
+scantily furnished outer room, but Dr. Kalmar said, "Better get yourself
+settled," and opened a door for his immature colleague.
+
+"But there's only one bed in this room," Dr. Hoyt objected. "You must
+have made a mistake."
+
+Dr. Kalmar, recalling the crowded cubicles of Earth, gave out a proud
+little dry laugh. "You're on Deneb now, boy. Here you'll have to get
+used to spaciousness. We like elbow room."
+
+The young doctor went in hesitantly, leaving the door open for a fast
+escape in case an error had been made. Dr. Kalmar had done the same when
+he'd arrived nine years ago. Judging by his own experience, it would
+take Dr. Hoyt a full six months to get used to having a room all to
+himself. There would be plenty of time to start showing him the ropes
+tomorrow, and in the meantime there were the backed-up appointments to
+be taken care of.
+
+Dr. Kalmar went to his office and had his nurse, Miss Dupont, send in
+the first patient.
+
+It was a girl of 17, Avis Emery, who had been brought by her parents.
+She sat sullenly, dark-haired, too daintily pretty and delicately
+shapely for a frontier world like this, while Mr. Emery put the file
+from Social Control on the doctor's desk.
+
+"We're farmers--" the man began.
+
+Dr. Kalmar interrupted, "The information is in the summary. Avis is to
+be assigned her mate next year, but she wants to go to Earth and become
+a nightclub singer. She refuses to marry a boy who'd be able to help
+around the farm, and she won't work on it herself."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+He looked up severely at the parents. "This is your own fault, you know.
+You pampered her. Farm labor is too valuable for pampering. We can't
+afford it."
+
+"You can blame me, Doc," said Mr. Emery miserably. "She's such a pretty
+little thing--I couldn't work her the way Sue and I work ourselves."
+
+"And then she started getting notions," Mrs. Emery added, giving her
+husband a vicious glare. Dr. Kalmar could imagine the nights of argument
+and accusation before they were at last forced to go for medical help to
+solve their self-created problem. "Singing in nightclubs back on Earth,
+marrying a billionaire, living in a sky yacht!"
+
+"Avis," said Dr. Kalmar gently. "You know it's not that easy, don't you?
+There are lots and lots of pretty girls on Earth and very few
+billionaires. If you did get a job singing in a nightclub, you know
+you'd have to do some unpleasant things because there's so much
+competition for customers. Things like stripteasing, drinking at the
+tables and going out with whoever the owner tells you to."
+
+The girl's face grew animated for the first time. "Well, sure! Why do
+you think I want to go?"
+
+"And you don't love Deneb and your farm?"
+
+"I hate both of them!"
+
+"But you realize that we must have food. Doesn't it make you feel
+important to grow more food so we can increase our population?"
+
+"No! Why should I care? I want to go to Earth!"
+
+Dr. Kalmar shook his head regretfully. He pushed a button on his desk.
+It was connected to a gravity generator directly under the girl's chair.
+Four gravities suddenly pushed her down into it and a hypodermic needle
+jabbed her swiftly with a hypnotic drug. She slumped. He released the
+button and the artificial gravity abated, but she remained dazed and
+relaxed.
+
+"You're not going to hurt her, are you, Doc?" Mr. Emery begged.
+
+"Certainly not. But I suppose you know Social Control's orders."
+
+They nodded, the husband gloomily, the wife with a single sharp jerk of
+her head.
+
+"You go right ahead and do it," she said. "I'm sick of working my
+fingers to the bone while she primps and preens and talks all the time
+about going to Earth."
+
+"Come, Avis," Dr. Kalmar said in a low, commanding voice.
+
+She stood up, blank-faced, and followed him out to the Ego Alter room.
+He closed the door, sat her down in the insulated seat next to the
+control console, put the wired plastic helmet on her and adjusted it to
+fit her skull snugly.
+
+Running his finger down the treatment sheet of her Social Control file,
+he set the dials according to its instructions. The psychic areas to be
+reduced were sex drive, competitiveness and imagination, while the areas
+of reproductive urge and cooperation were to be intensified. He
+regulated the individual timers and sent the varying charge through her
+brain.
+
+There was no reaction, no convulsion, no distortion of features. She sat
+there as if nothing had happened, but her personality had changed as
+completely as though she had been retrained from birth.
+
+Miss Dupont came in without knocking. She knew, of course, that any
+patient in the Ego Alter room would be incapable of being disturbed.
+
+"Rephysical, Dr. Kalmar?" she asked.
+
+"I'm afraid so. Will you prepare her, please?"
+
+The nurse removed the girl's clothes. There was no resistance.
+
+"Such a lovely body," she said. "It's a shame."
+
+He shrugged. "Until we have enough people and farms and industries, Miss
+Dupont, we'll just have to get used to altering people to fit the needs
+of our society. I'm sure you understand that."
+
+"Yes, but it still seems a shame. Bodies like that don't grow on trees."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+He gently moved the girl into the Rephysical Chamber. "They grow in this
+machine, though. As soon as we can afford it, which ought to be only a
+few hundred years from now, we can make any woman look like this, or
+even better."
+
+"And don't forget the men," Miss Dupont said as he started the
+mitogenetic generator. "We could use some Adonises around here."
+
+"We'll have them," he assured her.
+
+"Somebody will. None of us'll live that long."
+
+Working like a sculptor with a cathode in one hand and an anode in the
+other, Dr. Kalmar began reshaping the girl who stood fixedly in the
+boxlike chamber. The flesh fled from the cathode and chased after the
+anode as he broadened the fine nose, thickened the mobile lips, squared
+the slender jaw and drew out carefully the delicately arched orbital
+ridges.
+
+"I'll leave the curl in her hair," he said. "Every woman needs at least
+one feature she can be proud of."
+
+"You're telling me," Miss Dupont replied.
+
+"Synthetic tissue, please."
+
+She drew out a tube with a variable nozzle and started working just
+ahead of him. A spray of high-velocity cells shot through the girl's
+smooth skin at the neck, shoulders, breasts, hips and legs, forming
+shapeless lumps that he guided into cords and muscles. The slim figure
+quickly broadened, grew brawny and competent-looking, the body of a
+woman who could breed phenomenally while farming alongside her man.
+
+Dr. Kalmar racked up the instruments and helped Miss Dupont dress the
+girl in coveralls and sandals. He felt the pride of craftsmanship when
+he found that the clothing supplied for her by Social Control exactly
+fitted her. He injected an antidote to the hypnotic and gave her the
+standard test for emotional response as her expressionless face cleared
+to placidity.
+
+"Do you know where you are, Avis?"
+
+"Yes. Ego Alter and Rephysical."
+
+"What have we done to you?"
+
+"Changed me to fit my environment."
+
+"Do you resent being changed?"
+
+"No." She paused and looked worried. "Who's taking care of the crops
+while I'm here?"
+
+"They can wait till you and your parents get back, Avis. Let's show them
+the change, shall we?"
+
+"All right," she said. "I think they'll be proud of me. This is how they
+always wanted me to be."
+
+"And you?"
+
+"Oh, I feel much better. As if I don't have to try so hard."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"I'm glad, Avis. Miss Dupont, better have a sedative ready when her
+father sees her. I think he'll need it."
+
+"And her mother?" asked the nurse practically.
+
+"She'll probably want a drink to celebrate. Give her one."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Kalmar's prognosis was correct, only it didn't go far enough. His
+young assistant from Earth had come scooting out of his disquietingly
+large quarters and was jittering in the office when they entered.
+
+"Is _that_ the pretty girl who was waiting when we came in?" he yelped
+in outrage. "What have you done to her?"
+
+Dr. Kalmar gave the sedative to him instead of Mr. Emery, who was
+shocked, but had known in advance what to expect. Miss Dupont prepared
+another sedative quickly, gave Mrs. Emery a celebration drink and moved
+the family toward the door.
+
+"She looks fine, Doctor," the mother said happily. "Avis ought to be a
+big help around the house and farm from now on."
+
+"I'm sure she will," he said.
+
+"But she was so lovely!" wept Mr. Emery, though in a rapidly becalming
+voice as the sedative took effect.
+
+The door closed behind them.
+
+"You ought to be reported to the Medical Association back on Earth!" Dr.
+Hoyt said angrily. "Ruining a girl's looks like that!"
+
+Dr. Kalmar sighed. He had hoped to be able to put off this orientation
+lecture until the following day, when there wouldn't be so many patients
+jamming his appointment book.
+
+"All right, let's get it over with. First, I was also trained on Earth
+and know how Ego Alter and Rephysical are used there: Ego Alter to
+remove psychic blocks so people can compete better, and Rephysical so
+they'll be more attractive. Second, we're not under the jurisdiction of
+Earth's Medical Association. Third, we'd damn well better not be,
+because our problems and solutions aren't the same at all."
+
+"You'd have been jailed for spoiling that girl's chances of a good
+marriage!"
+
+"I didn't," Dr. Kalmar said quietly. "I improved them."
+
+"You did nothing of the--" Dr. Hoyt stopped. "Improved? How?"
+
+"I keep telling you this is a frontier world and you keep acting as if
+you understand, but you don't. Look, a family is an economic liability
+on Earth; it consumes without producing. That's why girls have so much
+trouble finding husbands there. Out here it's different. A family is an
+asset--if every member in it is willing to work."
+
+"But a pretty girl like that can always get by."
+
+"No Denebian can afford to marry a pretty girl. It's too risky. She
+can't work as hard as we do and still take care of her looks. And he'd
+worry about her constantly, which would cut into his efficiency. By
+having me make her a merely attractive girl in a wholesome, hearty way,
+Social Control guarantees more than just a marriage for her--it
+guarantees a contented married life."
+
+"Sweating away on a farm," Dr. Hoyt said.
+
+"Now that her anti-social strivings are gone, she'll realize that Deneb
+needs farmers instead of nightclub singers. She'll take pride in being a
+good worker, she'll raise as many children as she'll be capable of
+bearing, and she'll have a good husband and a prosperous farm. That
+wouldn't have satisfied her before. It will now. And she's better for it
+and so is Deneb."
+
+Dr. Hoyt shook his head. "It's all upside down."
+
+"You'll get used to it. Why not take today off and explore Denebia? You
+need a rest after all those months in space."
+
+"Maybe I will," said Dr. Hoyt vaguely, slightly anesthetized.
+
+"Good." Dr. Kalmar buzzed for Miss Dupont. "Send in the next patient,
+please. Oh, and Dr. Hoyt is taking the day off."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the young assistant was stunned into staying by the huge size of the
+Social Control file that was carried by the next patient, Mr. Fallon,
+and his wife.
+
+"I know just what you're thinking, Dr. Kalmar!" cried Mrs. Fallon
+distractedly, but with a nervously bright smile. "Those awful Fallons
+again! I don't blame you a bit, but--"
+
+As a matter of fact, that was exactly what Dr. Kalmar was thinking, plus
+the defeated feeling that they were all he needed to make the day
+complete.
+
+"Good Lord, what's in all those files?" Dr. Hoyt exclaimed.
+
+Dr. Kalmar could have explained, but he didn't feel up to it.
+
+Mr. Fallon, a wispy, shyly affable, poetic-looking chap, did it for him.
+"Papers," he said.
+
+"I know that, but why so many?" Dr. Hoyt asked impatiently.
+
+Miss Dupont seemed wryly amused as she watched his consternation.
+
+"I guess you might say it's because I can't make my mind up," confessed
+Mrs. Fallon with an uneasy giggle. She was a big woman who might have
+gurgled over a collection of toy dogs on Earth, but here she was a
+freight checker and her husband was a statistician in the Department of
+Supply, though on Earth he might have been anything from a composer to a
+social worker. "No matter how often we rephysical Harry, I always get
+tired of his looks in a few months."
+
+"And how often has that been done?" Dr. Hoyt demanded.
+
+"I think it's eleven times. Isn't that right, dear?"
+
+"No, sweet," said Mr. Fallon. "Thirteen."
+
+Dr. Kalmar could have interrupted, but he considered it wiser to let his
+assistant learn the hard way. Miss Dupont was enjoying it too much to
+interfere.
+
+"We've made him tall and we've made him short, skinny, fat, bulging with
+muscle, red hair, black hair, blond hair, gray hair--I don't know, just
+about everything in the book," said Mrs. Fallon, "and I simply can't
+seem to find one I'd like for keeps."
+
+"Then why the devil don't you get another husband?"
+
+Mrs. Fallon looked shocked. "Why, he was assigned to me!"
+
+"Dr. Hoyt just came from Earth," Dr. Kalmar cut in at last, before a
+brawl could start. "He's not familiar with our methods."
+
+"Let's hear the cockeyed reason," Dr. Hoyt said resignedly.
+
+"We keep our population balanced," said Dr. Kalmar. "Too many of either
+sex creates tension, hostility, loss of efficiency; look at Earth if you
+want proof. We can't risk even a little of that, so we use prenatal sex
+control to keep them exactly equal."
+
+"There's a wife for every man," Mr. Fallon put in genially, "and a
+husband for every woman. Works out fine."
+
+"With no surplus," Dr. Kalmar added. "There are no floaters to allow the
+kind of marital moving day you have on Earth, where so many just up and
+shift over to new mates. We get ours for life. That's where Ego Alter
+and Rephysical come in."
+
+"You mean people bring in their mates to have them done over?"
+
+"If they're not satisfied and if the mates agree to be changed."
+
+"I don't mind," said Mr. Fallon virtuously. "I figure Mabel will decide
+what she wants one of these changes, and then we can settle down and be
+happy with each other."
+
+"But what about you?" asked Dr. Hoyt, bewildered. "Don't you want her
+changed?"
+
+"Oh, no. I like her fine just as she is."
+
+"You see now how it works?" Dr. Kalmar asked. "We can't have a variety
+of mates, but we can have all the variety we want in one mate. It comes
+to the same thing, as far as I can see, and causes much less confusion,
+especially since we need stable relationships."
+
+Dr. Hoyt was striving heroically to stay indignant in spite of the
+sedative. "And do many ask to have their mates changed?"
+
+"I guess we're a sort of record, aren't we?" Mr. Fallon boasted.
+
+"I guess you are," agreed Dr. Kalmar. "And now, Dr. Hoyt, if there
+aren't any more questions, I'd like to proceed with this couple."
+
+Dr. Hoyt stretched his eyes wide to keep them open. "It's all screwy to
+me, but it's none of my business. As soon as I finish my internship, I'm
+heading back to Earth, where things make sense, so I don't have to
+understand this mishmash you call a planet. Need help?"
+
+"If you'd find out what Mrs. Fallon has in mind this time, it would let
+me run the patients through a lot faster."
+
+"How would they feel about it?" Dr. Hoyt asked.
+
+"It's all right with me," Mr. Fallon said amiably. "I'm pretty used to
+this, you know."
+
+"But what are we going to make you look like, Harry?" his wife fretted.
+"I felt very jealous of other women when you were handsome and I didn't
+like you just ordinary-looking."
+
+"Why not go through the model book with Dr. Hoyt?" suggested Dr. Kalmar.
+"There are still some types you haven't tried."
+
+"There _are_?" she asked in gratified astonishment. "Would you mind very
+much, Dr. Hoyt?"
+
+"Glad to," he said.
+
+Miss Dupont brought out the model book for him, and he and Mrs. Fallon
+studied the facial and physical types that were very explicitly
+illustrated there in three-dimensional full color. Mr. Fallon,
+contentedly working out math problems on a sheet of paper, left the
+choice entirely to her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile, Dr. Kalmar and Miss Dupont swiftly took care of a succession
+of other patients, raising the tolerance level of frustration in a
+watchmaker, replating the acne-pitted skin of a sensitive youth,
+restoring a finger lost in a machine-shop accident, and building up
+good-natured aggression in an ore miner whose productivity had slumped.
+
+Mrs. Fallon still hadn't decided when the last patient had been taken
+care of. She said unhappily, "I don't know. I simply absolutely don't
+know. Couldn't you suggest _something_, Dr. Hoyt?"
+
+"Wouldn't be ethical," he told her bluntly. "Not allowed to."
+
+Dr. Kalmar, checking the Social Control papers with Miss Dupont,
+wondered if he should interfere. It would lower confidence in Dr. Hoyt,
+which meant that people would insist on Dr. Kalmar's treating them.
+Then, instead of having an assistant to remove some of the load, he'd
+have to do the work of two men. He decided to let the young doctor
+handle it.
+
+But Dr. Hoyt stood up in exasperation, slammed the book shut, and said,
+"Mrs. Fallon, if you know what you want, I'll be glad to oblige. But I'm
+not a telepathy--"
+
+"Is there anything I can do?" Dr. Kalmar interrupted quickly, before his
+assistant could create any more damage.
+
+"He doesn't have to get huffy," Mrs. Fallon said indignantly. "All I
+asked for was a suggestion or two."
+
+"Insult my wife, will he?" Mr. Fallon belligerently added.
+
+"It's my fault," Dr. Kalmar said. "Dr. Hoyt just got in today from Earth
+and he's tired and he naturally doesn't understand all our ways yet--"
+
+"_Yet?_" Dr. Hoyt repeated in disgust. "What makes you think I'll
+ever--"
+
+"And I shouldn't have burdened him with this problem until he's had a
+chance to rest up and look around," Dr. Kalmar continued in a slightly
+louder voice. "Now, let's see if we can't settle this problem before
+closing time, eh?"
+
+The Fallons subsided, Dr. Hoyt watched with a sarcastic eye, though he
+kept silent as Dr. Kalmar and Miss Dupont, working as a shrewd team,
+gave them the suggestion they had been looking for. It was all done very
+smoothly, so smoothly that Dr. Kalmar felt professional pride because
+even his stiff-necked assistant was unable to detect the fact that it
+_was_ a suggestion.
+
+Dr. Kalmar got Mrs. Fallon to reminisce about the alterations her
+husband had undergone, and Miss Dupont promptly agreed with her when she
+explained why each had been unsatisfactory. It took some time, but he
+eventually brought her back to what Mr. Fallon had looked like when
+she'd first married him.
+
+"Now, isn't that the strangest thing?" she said, puzzled. "I can't
+remember. Can you, dear?"
+
+"It's a little mixed up," Mr. Fallon admitted. "Let's see, I know I was
+taller and I think I had a long, thin face--"
+
+"Oh, we don't have to guess," Dr. Kalmar said. "Nurse, we have the
+information on file, don't we?"
+
+"Yes, Doctor," she said, and instantly produced a photograph. They
+evidently thought it was merely filing efficiency; they hadn't noticed
+her searching for the picture quietly while Dr. Kalmar had been leading
+them on. He had, in fact, delayed asking her until she'd nodded to
+indicate that she had found it.
+
+Mr. Fallon frowned as if he'd recognized the face but couldn't remember
+the name. His wife gave a little shriek of admiration.
+
+"Why, Harry, you looked perfectly wonderful!"
+
+"Those deep dimples made shaving pretty hard," he recalled.
+
+"But they're _darling_! Why did you ever let me change you?"
+
+"Because I wanted you to be happy, sweet."
+
+It was as simple as that--a bit of practical psychology based on
+knowledge of the patients. Dr. Kalmar wished wistfully that old Dr.
+Lowell had been there to observe. He would have approved, which might
+have made up for Dr. Hoyt's unpleasant expression.
+
+"I hope this is the one you want," Dr. Kalmar said as he took them to
+the front door after the rephysical.
+
+"Goodness, I hope so!" Mrs. Fallon exclaimed. She looked fondly at her
+husband, and this time had to look up to see his face. "I'm almost
+_positive_ this is what I want Harry to be."
+
+"Well, if it isn't, sweet," Mr. Fallon said, "we'll try something else.
+I don't mind as long as it makes you happy."
+
+They closed the door behind them, leaving the hospital empty of all but
+the small staff.
+
+"They're crazy!" Dr. Hoyt exploded. "He's not the one we should be
+changing. That idiotic female needs a good Ego Alter!"
+
+"He hasn't asked for it," Dr. Kalmar pointed out patiently.
+
+"Then he ought to!"
+
+"That's his decision, isn't it? There's such a thing as ethics, you
+know."
+
+"I've never seen anything more insane than the way you work," snapped
+Dr. Hoyt. "I can't wait to finish my stretch here and go home."
+
+He stamped out, weaving slightly because of the sedative.
+
+"Well, what do you think of our assistant?" asked Dr. Kalmar.
+
+"He's cute," Miss Dupont said irrationally.
+
+Dr. Kalmar glowered at her. He'd forgotten that she was due to have a
+mate assigned to her this year.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Routine at the hospital was anything but routine. Dr. Hoyt barely kept
+from yelping each time someone was treated, and his help was given so
+unwillingly that Dr. Kalmar, sweating under a double load and with Dr.
+Hoyt to argue with at the same time, was all for putting him on the ship
+and asking Earth for another intern. But Miss Dupont talked him out of
+it.
+
+For no discernible reason other than loneliness, Dr. Hoyt was taking her
+out. She was pleased, even though he crabbed constantly about the
+shabby-looking clothes she wore, which were typical of Deneb, and the
+way they fitted her.
+
+Either the two of them didn't talk shop, or she had no influence with
+him--his criticism and impatience grew sharper each week.
+
+It bothered Dr. Kalmar more than he thought it should, and much more
+than Mrs. Kalmar wanted it to. She was a pleasant little woman who liked
+things as they were, which was why Dr. Kalmar had hesitated all this
+while to ask her to undergo a slight rephysical; he would have preferred
+her a little taller, more filled out, her slight wrinkles deleted and,
+while he was thinking about it, he wished she'd let him give her
+space-black hair instead of her indeterminately blondish mop. But he'd
+rather have her as she was than peevish, so he had never mentioned it.
+
+"Don't let the boy upset you, she said. "It's only that he's so young
+and inexperienced. You can't expect him to adjust quickly to a new
+environment and a whole new medical orientation."
+
+"But that's just what annoys me! Why, I used to hang onto every word of
+Dr. Lowell's when I came here! I never thought I knew better than he
+did."
+
+"Well, dear, you're you and Dr. Lowell is Dr. Lowell and Dr. Hoyt is Dr.
+Hoyt."
+
+He tried to think of an answer and couldn't. "I suppose so."
+
+"Maybe you'd feel better if you spoke to Dr. Lowell about it."
+
+"What could he do? This is really an internal problem that I should work
+out with Dr. Hoyt. I can't involve Dr. Lowell in it."
+
+But it became intolerable when there was a young girl who wanted to be a
+boy and Dr. Kalmar and Dr. Hoyt got into the worst battle yet.
+Naturally, she had to be given an Ego Alter to make her happy about
+being a girl, whereas Dr. Hoyt argued that she should be allowed to be a
+boy if that was what she wanted. Dr. Kalmar explained angrily once more
+that the sexes were exactly balanced and Dr. Hoyt quoted the rule of
+personal choice. It was applicable on Earth, but not on Deneb, Dr.
+Kalmar retorted, to which Dr. Hoyt snorted something about playing God.
+
+Dr. Kalmar confessed harshly to his wife that she was right. He had to
+bring old Dr. Lowell into the situation; it was out of Dr. Kalmar's
+control and was keeping the hospital in a turmoil. It was time for Dr.
+Lowell to inspect the hospital, the job he had taken in place of actual
+retirement. Dr. Kalmar needed help from Miss Dupont to bring the problem
+out into the open. But she became unexpectedly obstinate.
+
+"I won't hurt Leo's career," she explained flatly.
+
+Dr. Kalmar gave her a vacant look. "Leo?"
+
+She blushed. "Dr. Hoyt. He's honestly trying to understand, but he finds
+it so different from Earth. Practically everything we do here is in
+reverse."
+
+"But so is our environment, Miss Dupont. Earth is over-crowded and Deneb
+is under-populated, so of course our methods would be the opposite of
+Earth's. He has to be made to see that we must solve our problems our
+own way."
+
+She studied his face suspiciously. "That's all you want?"
+
+"Certainly. Damn it, do you think I want him fired and sent back to
+Earth before his internship's up? I know it would hurt his record.
+Besides, I need an assistant--but not one I have to bicker with every
+time I make a move."
+
+"Well, in that case--"
+
+"Good girl. All you have to do is help me hold off the cases he'd argue
+about until Dr. Lowell gets here." He stared down glumly at his hands,
+which were gripping each other tightly. "God knows I'm no diplomat. Dr.
+Lowell is. He convinced me easily enough when I came here. Maybe he can
+do the same with Dr. Hoyt."
+
+"Oh, I hope he can," Miss Dupont said earnestly. "I want so much to have
+you and Leo work together in harmony."
+
+He glanced up, curious. "Why?"
+
+"Because I'm in love with him."
+
+He found himself nodding bitterly. Having Dr. Hoyt go back to Earth
+wouldn't be a fraction as bad as Miss Dupont leaving with him. So now
+there was something else to worry about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Lowell came bouncing out of the jetcab a few days later. "The
+hospital better be spotless!" he called out jovially, paying off the
+hackie. "I'm in a mean mood. Liable to suspend everybody."
+
+There was a strange lift to Dr. Kalmar's spirits as the old man entered
+the office. He wished without hope that he could inspire the same sort
+of reverence and respect. Impossible, of course. Dr. Lowell was great;
+he himself was nothing more than competent.
+
+Dr. Kalmar introduced his young assistant to the old man.
+
+"Young and strong," Dr. Lowell approved. "That's what we need on Deneb.
+Skill is important, but health and youth even more so."
+
+"For those who stay," said Dr. Hoyt frostily. "I'm not."
+
+Dr. Kalmar felt himself quiver with rage. The wet-nosed pup couldn't
+talk to Dr. Lowell like that!
+
+But Dr. Lowell was saying cheerily, "You seem to have made up your mind
+to go back. No matter. Some decisions are like egg-shells--made only to
+be broken. I hope that's what you'll do with yours."
+
+"Not a chance," Dr. Hoyt said. He didn't take the arrogant expression
+off his face even when Miss Dupont looked at him pleadingly.
+
+"Then I say let's signal the next ship--" Dr. Kalmar began.
+
+Dr. Lowell cut in quickly, "You two have patients to attend to, I see.
+Don't worry about me. I know my way around this poor little wretch of a
+building. Not much like Earth hospitals, is it?" He headed for the
+medical supply room, adding just before he went in, "A lot can be said
+for small installations. The personal touch, you know."
+
+Dr. Kalmar enviously realized how deftly the old man had put the
+youngster in his place, whereas he would have stood there and slugged it
+out verbally. Lord, if he could only acquire that awesome wisdom!
+
+"Well, back to work," he said, trying to imitate the cheeriness at
+least.
+
+"Sure, let's ruin some more lives," Dr. Hoyt almost snarled.
+
+"Leo, _please_!" whispered Miss Dupont imploringly.
+
+Five minutes later the two doctors were furiously arguing over a very
+old man who had been sent by Social Control to have his eyesight
+strengthened.
+
+"You have no right to let anybody dodder around like this!" Dr. Hoyt
+yelled. "What in hell is Rephysical for if not for such cases?"
+
+"You probably think we ought to make him look like 25 again," Dr. Kalmar
+yelled back. "If that's all you've learned working here--"
+
+"Now, now," said Dr. Lowell soothingly. He'd come in unnoticed by either
+of the men. "Dr. Hoyt is right, of course. We _would_ like to make old
+people young and some day we'll be able to afford it. But not for some
+time to come."
+
+"Why not?" Dr. Hoyt demanded in a lower tone, visibly flattered by Dr.
+Lowell's seemingly taking his side.
+
+"Rephysical can't actually make anyone young. It can only give the
+outward appearance of youth and replace obviously diseased parts. But an
+old body is an old organism; it has to break down eventually. If we give
+it more vigor than it can endure, it breaks down too soon, much sooner
+than if we let it age normally. That represents economic loss as well as
+a humanitarian one."
+
+"I don't follow you," Dr. Hoyt said bewilderedly.
+
+"Well, our patient used to be a machinist. A good one. Now he's only
+able to be an oiler. A good one, too, when you improve his eyesight. He
+can go on doing that for years, performing a useful function. But he'd
+wear himself out in no time as a machinist again if you de-aged him."
+
+"Is that supposed to make sense?"
+
+"It does," said Dr. Lowell, "for Deneb."
+
+Dr. Hoyt wanted to continue the discussion, but Dr. Lowell was already
+on his way to inspect another part of the hospital. Grumbling, the young
+man helped chart the optical nerves that had to be replaced and measure
+the new curve of the retinas ordered by Social Control.
+
+But he fought just as strenuously over other cases, especially a retired
+freight-jet pilot who had to have his reflexes slowed down so he could
+become a contented meteorologist. Whenever there was a loud disagreement
+of this sort, Dr. Lowell was there to mediate calmly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the end of the day, Dr. Kalmar was emotionally exhausted. He said as
+he and Dr. Lowell were washing up, "The kid's hopeless. I thought you
+could straighten him out--God knows I couldn't--but he'll never see why
+we have to work the way we do."
+
+"What do you suggest?" Dr. Lowell asked through a towel.
+
+"Send him back to Earth. Get an intern who's more malleable."
+
+Dr. Lowell tossed the towel into the sterilizer. "Can't be done. We're
+expanding so fast all over the Galaxy that Earth can't train and ship
+out enough doctors for the new colonies. If we sent him back, I don't
+know when we'd get another."
+
+Dr. Kalmar swallowed. "You mean it's him or nobody?"
+
+"Afraid so."
+
+"But he'll never fit in on Deneb!"
+
+"You did," Dr. Lowell said.
+
+Dr. Kalmar tried to smile modestly. "I realized immediately how little I
+knew and how much more experience you had. I was willing to learn. Why,
+I used to listen to you and watch you work and try to see your reasons
+for doing things--"
+
+"You think so?" asked Dr. Lowell.
+
+Dr. Kalmar glanced at him in astonishment. "You know I did. I still do,
+for that matter."
+
+"When you landed on Deneb," said Dr. Lowell, "you were the most
+stubborn, opinionated young ass I'd ever met."
+
+Dr. Kalmar's smile became an appreciative grin. "Damn, I wish I had that
+light touch of yours!"
+
+"You were so dogmatic and argumentative that Dr. Hoyt is a suggestible
+schoolboy in comparison."
+
+"Well, you don't have to go that far," Dr. Kalmar said. "I get what
+you're driving at--every intern needs orientation and I should be more
+patient and understanding."
+
+"Then you don't follow me at all," stated Dr. Lowell. "Invite Dr. Hoyt,
+Miss Dupont and me to your house for dinner tonight and maybe you'll get
+a better idea of what I mean."
+
+"Anything for a free meal, eh?"
+
+"And to keep a doctor here on Deneb that we'd lose otherwise."
+
+"Implying that I can't do it."
+
+"Isn't that the decision you'd come to?"
+
+"Yes, I guess it is," Dr. Kalmar confessed. "All right, how about dinner
+at my house tonight? I'll round up the other two and call Harriet so
+she'll expect us."
+
+"Delighted to come," said Dr. Lowell. "Nice of you to ask me."
+
+Miss Dupont was elated at the invitation and Dr. Hoyt said he had
+nothing else to do anyway. On the videophone Mrs. Kalmar was dismayed
+for a moment, until Dr. Lowell told her to put through an emergency
+order to Central Commissary and he'd verify it.
+
+That was when Dr. Kalmar realized how serious the old man was. On a raw
+planet where crises were everyday routine, a situation had to be
+catastrophic before it could be called an emergency.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dinner on Deneb was the same as anywhere else in the Galaxy. To free
+women for other work, food was delivered weekly in cooked form. A
+special messenger from Central Commissary had brought the emergency
+rations and Mrs. Kalmar had simply punctured the self-heat cartridges
+and put the servings in front of each guest; the containers were
+disposable plates and came with single-use plastic utensils. No garbage,
+no preparation, no cleaning up afterward, except to toss them all into
+the converter furnace. Dr. Hoyt was still not accustomed to wholly grown
+foods; he'd been raised on synthetics, of course, which were the staples
+on Earth.
+
+"Well, that was good," said Dr. Lowell, getting up from the table with
+his round little belly comfortably expanded. "Now, let's have a few
+drinks before we start a professional bull session. Where do you keep
+your liquor? I'd like to mix my special so Dr. Hoyt can see we colonials
+are not so provincial."
+
+"Good Lord, I haven't had your special for years!" exclaimed Dr. Kalmar.
+"Since about the time I came to Deneb, in fact."
+
+"That's why it's a special. Reserved for state occasions, such as
+arrivals of colleagues from our dear old home planet."
+
+"Oh, you don't have to go to all that bother," said Dr. Hoyt. "You'd
+have to make it twice--once now and once when I leave."
+
+"That won't be for quite a while, will it?" Miss Dupont asked anxiously.
+
+"As soon as I finish my internship. No more alien worlds for me. I like
+Earth."
+
+Mrs. Kalmar got him to talk about it, which was much easier than getting
+him to stop, while Dr. Kalmar showed the old man where the liquor stock
+and fixings were kept. Watching him mix the ingredients with a chemist's
+care, Dr. Kalmar felt a glow of nostalgia. He recalled the celebration
+at Dr. Lowell's house, several months after he had come from Earth, when
+he'd enjoyed himself so much that he'd passed out. It was one of the
+pleasanter memories of his start on Deneb.
+
+"Can't mix them all in a single batch," Dr. Lowell explained, bringing
+the drinks over one at a time as he finished preparing them. "Mrs.
+Kalmar ... Miss Dupont ... our gracious host, Dr. Kalmar ... and now Dr.
+Hoyt and myself." He lifted his glass at Dr. Hoyt. "Welcome to our
+latest associate--product, like ourselves, of the great medical schools
+of Earth. It's a forlorn hope, but may he learn as much from us about
+our peculiar methods as we learn from him about the latest terrestrial
+advances."
+
+Dr. Hoyt, smiling as if he didn't think it possible, stood up when
+they'd downed their toast to him. "To Earth," he said. "May I get back
+in record time." He gulped it, said, "Delicious--for a colonial drink,"
+and froze with his smile as fixed as if it had been painted on.
+
+"Leo!" Miss Dupont cried, and shook him, but he stayed frozen.
+
+"The man's allergic to alcohol!" said Dr. Kalmar, astonished.
+
+"Do something!" Mrs. Kalmar begged. "Don't let him stand there like
+that! He--he looks like a petrified man!"
+
+"Don't get panicky," said Dr. Lowell in a quiet, confident voice.
+"That's when you passed out, Dr. Kalmar. Right after your first taste of
+my special."
+
+"But _we_ haven't," Dr. Kalmar objected.
+
+"Naturally. Your drinks weren't drugged."
+
+"Drugged?" shrieked Miss Dupont. "You doped him?"
+
+"That's rather obvious, isn't it?"
+
+"But--what for?" Dr. Kalmar stammered.
+
+"Same reason I slipped you a mickey not long after you got here. We
+can't take any chances that he'll ship back to Earth. You see?"
+
+"I don't," raged Miss Dupont. "I think it's a cheap, dirty, foul trick
+and it won't work, either. You can't _keep_ him drugged."
+
+"I don't like you talking to Dr. Lowell like that," said Dr. Kalmar
+indignantly.
+
+"You should be the last one to object," Mrs. Kalmar pointed out. "He
+said he drugged you, too."
+
+"I know," Dr. Kalmar said blankly. "I don't understand--"
+
+"You will," promised Dr. Lowell. "Just come along and don't interfere.
+Better give him the order; it'll keep things straighter."
+
+Mrs. Kalmar was grimly disapproving and Miss Dupont was close to
+hysteria. Only Dr. Kalmar retained his awed respect for Dr. Lowell. If
+the old man said it was all right, it was, even if he couldn't see the
+reason.
+
+"Go ahead," urged Dr. Lowell.
+
+"Dr. Hoyt!"
+
+"Yes, Dr. Kalmar?"
+
+"You will come with us!"
+
+"Yes, Dr. Kalmar."
+
+Dr. Lowell took them back to the hospital.
+
+"Now what?" asked Dr. Kalmar.
+
+"You actually don't know?" Miss Dupont demanded. "He wants to put Leo
+through the Ego Alter."
+
+"That's absurd," Dr. Kalmar said angrily, "and an outright slander. Dr.
+Lowell wouldn't consider such a thing--the boy didn't ask for it and it
+wasn't authorized by Social Control."
+
+Dr. Lowell smiled genially and opened the door to the Ego Alter room. "I
+hate to disillusion you, Dr. Kalmar. That's exactly what I have in
+mind--the same thing I did to you."
+
+"That's absurd," Dr. Kalmar repeated, but with less conviction and more
+confusion than before.
+
+"It worked. Tell him to sit down."
+
+Dr. Kalmar did, and automatically fitted the wired plastic helmet to Dr.
+Hoyt's head.
+
+"You can't!" cried Miss Dupont as he reached for the dials on the
+control console. "It's not fair!"
+
+"Let's not get involved in a discussion on ethics," Dr. Lowell said.
+"Deneb can't afford to lose him; we need every doctor we have. If he
+goes back to Earth it may be years before we get a replacement."
+
+"But you can't do it without his consent!"
+
+"There's time for that later," the old man grinned. "Keep his eyes on
+you, Dr. Kalmar, while you build up his father image. Cut down on
+hostility, aggression and power drive. Boost social responsibility and
+adventurousness. But make sure he's looking at you constantly."
+
+"I won't allow it," said Mrs. Kalmar flatly. "You won't make my husband
+violate his oath."
+
+"I did it to him, didn't I?" Dr. Lowell replied jovially. "It got you a
+husband."
+
+Miss Dupont grabbed at Dr. Kalmar's hand, but he had already turned on
+the current.
+
+"Anything else?" he asked.
+
+"Well, he has to get married, of course," Dr. Lowell said. "Let him look
+at Miss Dupont--she's scheduled for this year, isn't she?--while you
+give him a shot of mating urge. Now, wipe out the memory of this
+incident and put him on a joy jag. We can validate that by liquoring him
+up afterward. When you're finished, bring him to."
+
+Dr. Hoyt came out of it almost with a whoop. He lurched out of the
+insulated seat, stared at Miss Dupont for a moment with eyes that almost
+glittered, and seized and kissed her.
+
+"My goodness!" she gasped.
+
+"Now, what were you saying about ethics?" Dr. Lowell asked.
+
+There was no answer. Both Miss Dupont and Mrs. Kalmar had frozen.
+
+"You drugged them, too?" Dr. Kalmar weakly wanted to know.
+
+"A bit slower-acting," admitted the old man. "All you have to do with
+them is wipe out the last half hour. Don't want any witnesses to an
+unethical act, you know. Oh, and put them on a jag also."
+
+Dr. Kalmar followed instructions.
+
+Finished, they left the three uproariously drunk in the waiting room and
+went to wash up. Dr. Kalmar went along bewilderedly. The old man was as
+unconcerned as if he did this sort of thing daily.
+
+"I was as arrogant and belligerent as this squirt was?"
+
+"Worse," Dr. Lowell said. "He was willing to finish out his internship.
+You weren't. Still worried about the ethics?"
+
+"Yes. Naturally."
+
+"All right, apply some logic, then. Are you happier on Deneb than you'd
+have been on Earth?"
+
+"Well, certainly. I'd have been lucky to get a job doctoring in a summer
+camp. I wouldn't trade a roomy planet like this for the jammed cubicles
+of Earth. And I like our methods better than terrestrial dogma. But
+those are my preferences. I can't inflict them on anybody else."
+
+"The hell they were your preferences. You bickered more about our
+methods and longed more loudly for the tenements of Earth than this lad
+ever did. All it took was a slight Ego Alter and you have a happier life
+than you would have had. Right?"
+
+Dr. Kalmar felt his tension ease. If the old man said it was right, it
+was. He became momentarily resentful when he realized that that reaction
+had been installed by Dr. Lowell, but then he smiled. It really was
+right. A bit arbitrary, perhaps, but for the good of Dr. Hoyt and Deneb
+in the long run, just as it had been for himself.
+
+"Look," he said, drying his arms. "I've been wanting my wife to go
+through a slight rephysical."
+
+"Why don't you ask her?"
+
+"The fact is that I'm afraid she'll think I'm dissatisfied and I don't
+want her to get resentful."
+
+"Maybe she'd like you to do some changing, too."
+
+"What for? I'm all right."
+
+"She probably feels the same way about herself."
+
+"But all I want are a few changes in her. She's as high as a space pilot
+now. It would be a cinch to--"
+
+Dr. Lowell flung down the towel and gave him an outraged glare. "There's
+such a thing as professional ethics, Dr. Kalmar!"
+
+"But you--"
+
+"That's different. It was a social decision, not a selfish one. If you
+ask her and she agrees, that's up to her. But you can't take advantage
+of her in an egocentric, arbitrary way. You just try it and I'll have
+you sent back to Earth."
+
+Dr. Kalmar felt his knees grow weak in alarm. "No, no. It's not that
+important. Just an insignificant kind of wish."
+
+And it was, he discovered when they went out to the waiting room. Unused
+to jags, Mrs. Kalmar was more affectionate than she'd been since they
+were first married; he'd have to remember to go on them periodically
+with her. Miss Dupont, unwilling to budge out of Dr. Hoyt's tight arms,
+had glassily joyous eyes. Dr. Hoyt didn't let her go until he caught
+sight of Dr. Kalmar.
+
+"Greatest doctor I ever met," he said enthusiastically. "Won'ful planet,
+Deneb. Just wanna marry Miss Dupont, stay here and learn at your feet.
+Okay?"
+
+Dr. Kalmar's glance at the old man was no less worshipful. "It couldn't
+be okayer," he said.
+
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