The Biological Revolt - Philip Jose Farmer(1), ebook, Temp

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THE BIOLOGICAL
REVOLT
PHILIP JOSE FARMER
The world now enters a new cycle, that of the antibiotics and wonder medicines. Good as these
scientific remedies are, scientists already warn us that the human body is beginning to manufacture new
bacteria, new microbes, which, in turn, create unknown virulent diseases. Man now eats more chemicals
than ever before. Our daily bread is loaded with chemicals; the fowl, beef, and particularly pork we eat
are all loaded with antibiotics.
In his eagerness to make money, man stops at nothing. When will the human body revolt and break out
in new, loathesome diseases? This is a serious problem for today’s health scientists. The problem is
world wide.
1
‘The dark lines of a man’s head and shoulders cut across the brightness. The silhouette hung in the frame
and then bent forward to look into the room.
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 The figure turned so he would not block the shine. He looked upon that part of the bed lit by the moon
and upon a woman who slept.
“Barbara,” he whispered.
“Barbara!” His voice trembled with loneliness.
The woman jumped from bed, scooped up a gown and slid it on. As she tied the strings across her
bosom, she wheeled upon the man outside. Her voice was shrill. “Go away, Bill! Go away!”
The recent presence of another man was obvious -a shirt and a necktie hung on the door knob. The
piney odor of pipe tobacco remained in the air.
“Barbara, I’m sick.Very sick. I need you.”
She stepped backwards from him, slowly. “There’s nothing I can do for you. If you weredying , I
couldn’t even hold your hand.”
“It’s not true, Barbara.” His voice was lower and more controlled, and his eyes were red and hot. “You
could at least take one shot of anti-asp. You could talk with me without being affected.”
“No, the anti-asp shot is just a trick of yours. If you loved me, husband dear, you’d not ask me to take
one shot for you. You know how terrible the asp is! Do you want me to suffer, too?”
“Barbara! If you knew how lonely I am.”
Trembling, she said, “Besides, how could you want me now?” She glanced at the door where the man,
Travers, had left.
He gripped the sill tighter, as if thehouse were whirling and he didn’t want to fall off.
For the first time, she stepped toward him. She yelled, “Do you think you are the only one who’s
lonely?”
“No, no—I understand. But remember, Barbara, we said, ‘for better or worse, till death do us part.’”
She screamed, “Get out, Bill. I wish you were dead! You are dead, to me! Get out before I kill you ...
Or myself!” She turned and ran through the door.
2
The man walked alone.
His passage from the house through narrow woods was marked by solitude and terror.Mosquitoes,
thirsty, swooped toward him. Closer, they suddenly angled off and flew away. They wanted none of his
stench. A frog, sitting apart from the path flopped away panicked through the weeds. A coon, clinging to
a branch and complacently watching the man, suddenly sniffed. It scuttled up the tree and clung to the
bending tip. This man, Bill Ogtate, was the Asp.
The terror he breathed and sweated with every second was his curse. Victim of man’s revenge and
ingenuity, he was doomed for eight years to imbue with the asp allwho came close. His free will had been
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 violated, but the horrified world could not help him. Their sympathy and aid came from a distance;
nobody could hold his hand or call him brother.
The Asp was impregnated with that giant protein molecule called the asp. It was forcibly injected into his
bloodstream where it spread to every part of his body. Utilizing the electromagnetic field of the body
cells, the asp attached itself to each cell so that the host must “share” its field with the uninvited guest.
Many of Ogtate’s cells inhospitably refused, and the commensals secured a foothold only on about an
eighth of the total.
Bill Ogtate’s weight increased with the swarm of semivirus. The demand for more energy aroused his
appetite. His metabolism accelerated, and his body, to control the increased energy-output, released it in
heat and sweat as in exercise. The internal body tem-perature thus remained normal and constant.
Ogtate’s skin was the primary transmitter of the “bite,” as this emanation came to be called. Asps
radiated continuously from him, although the rate varied according to reproduction. When asps attached
to a certain organ built up to a certain bulk, the host was unable to endure any more accretion. They
threw the switch, so to say, cut off some power, and weak-ened the link between the negative and
positive poles of host and guest. Though some asps always clung, others were kicked off and thus
emitted from the Asp. They left his body via breath, skin, and other means of voiding. They floated
through the air to be breathed or otherwise absorbed by whatever living thing hap-pened to be near.
Ogtate himself was immune to the reaction his presence induced in others. Though burdened by the giant
molecules, his sympathetic nervous system and adrenal glands, which were particularly affected in others,
were quite indifferent to the asps. They were injected into his blood along with an antibody. The antibody
depended upon the closed field of the adren-als for reactivation. Although it could not, unfor-tunately, kill
the asps, it kept them from stimulating the adrenals. It did not, however, deaden these organs to other
vital stimuli.
Ogtate breathed and sweated as a man must. The invisible miasma put out long fingers through the air
and plunged then into the lungs and skin of any living creature that came near. In a short time the fingers
felt the blood. They wrapped themselves around the medulla, the inner portion of the adrenals, and they
squeezed.
The effects were immediate. Adrenalin poured out, activating the sympathetic nervous system, at-tached
closely to the glands. The person thus “bitten” felt at once the hardbeating heart, the shallow and jerky
breaths, cold sweat and rising body tempera-ture, shaking of body and paling of skin, standing-up of
hair, halting of digestion, loosening of muscles, dilation of pupils.
Above all he felt suspension of reason.
Added together, the symptoms characterized one dominant emotion.
Fear.
There was but one thought body and mind had: Get away fast.
Actually, there was no chance for permanent damage to those who were affected, as long as they went
away before their systems were overstimulated. The asps attacked only briefly before being excreted. To
get a hard grip upon the cells, they had to be suspended in a nourishing fluid and injected into the blood.
The nutrient gave them strength to hook into the host’s electromagnetic field.
Page 3
 Although the Asp’s bite was at times strong, at others weak, according to the rhythm of their
repro-duction, he always radiated enough that he could nev-er be approached by unvaccinated people.
If he were a rabbit, he could safely have hopped through a den of hungry lions.
But he was a man who would have welcomed even the company of a lion.
3
The visor in the front room of the Ogtate house bonged. Barbara walked into the front room and
pressed a button. The screen sprang from blankness into full life color. Seemingly, a man stood before
her.
“Mrs. Ogtate, I am General Yewliss of the Terran Psychological Corps.” The tones, like the man, were
sturdy and dark. Once you heard them, you didn’t forget.
She nodded and said, “I’ve seen you on the news, General.”
He wasted no time, but like the big red-black bull he so much resembled, charged at the point. “Mrs.
Ogtate, I’m going to ask you if you will forgive me for interfering with your free will. Believeme, it was
absolutely necessary for the good of Earth.”
“What did you do?”
“Mrs. Ogtate, for some time we’ve had a detector alarm buried near your house. We call it a
‘rattle-snake.’ When the person whose presence it is set to detect comes near, it sends out a signal. Its
receiver is this.” He tapped a little box on his wrist. “I’ve been wearing this day and night. Ten minutes
ago I was awakened by its alarm. That meant much to me. It meant that your husband, undoubtedly the
most important man on Earth, was at your house.”
He paused,then added, “And it implied much more.
“What do you mean?”
“Just this.Bill Ogtate finally broke under the pressure of loneliness and ostracism. He knows that you, the
person he loves more than any other, will not share his exile, yet he’s desperate enough to make a
hopeless plea.”
Paling, she said, “Have you been spying?”
His broad swarthy face split showing white teeth, and his large hand passed over his closely-cropped
black poll with underlying red glints.“Hardly. Even the military don’t do that nowadays, Madame. But the
Psych Corps has many resources. One is the Com-puter of Probabilities, the so-called ‘giant brain’ at
New Delphi. Given all available data, it estimated he should break down about this time.Especially if he
were sick. And that he should come to you.”
Scornfully, she said, “Do you need a machine to tell you that?”
The General smiled slightly and said, “Your re-buke is accepted. To tell the truth, I figured it out
independently, too, but one must have the backing of authority, you know.”
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 He became brisk. “Would you mind telling me, Madame, if our surmises were correct? He did make an
appeal, didn’t he?”
The General’s eyes went over her shoulder. She didn’t turn around, for she knew by the oriental aroma
of cigarette smoke that Toni Travers had come into the room.
“Yes, you were right,” she said. Her eyes looked straight into his: her back straightened and her
shoul-ders squared.
He said, “Please don’t get angry, Mrs. Ogtate. I make no moral judgments. One lives as one must.”
“I’m not interested in what you think. What else do you want?”
He glanced at her trembling lower lip and said, “Would you care to sign a waiver over our violation of
your free will? Remember, we are trying to influ-ence your husband to give Earth the Belos.”
“I know that. Don’t you think the Government has approached me enough on thatsubject. And,” she
suddenly shouted, “myanswer to them is still ‘no’!”
“I’m well aware of that,” Yewliss replied, “That’s why I didn’t renew the plea. If you’d answer my
ques-tion, Mrs. Ogtate, we could end this. The hour is late. I’m sure you’re anxious to get back to ...
bed.” He paused, and she wondered if he shot an amused glance at Travers from under his lowered lids.
Then he continued, “And I have to work fast. Earth’s existence is in the balance.”
His words did not affect her, for he said them so prosaically. However, she was tired of the subject
“Send the papers. I’ll sign them, provided I have your promise you won’t bother me again.”
He spoke quickly. “You have it. Papers won’t be needed. The recording of our conversation is
sufficient. Thank you, and goodnight, Mrs. Ogtate.”
Travers came from behind and put his arms around her waist. Smoke blew around her face. “You need
sleep. I think I’ll make coffee for myself.”
She turned in his arms and put her head on his chest. “He saw you.”
“So what?Do people pay much attention to such things any more?”
“You don’t understand. If I would go to Bill and say I’d live with him, I’m sure he would turn the Belos
over to Earth. The war would be over. But I can’t. They can’t make me do it. I am so lonely. If it
weren’t for you, I don’t know what I’d do.”
“Move away with me. Get a divorce.”
She raised her head. Tears sparkled. “I will, Tom, Tomorrow.”
4
Gathering his thoughts on this strangest of all stories, Yewliss went to his desk. He pressed a button; his
orderly came in.
“Everything’s ready?”
Page 5
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