Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ
- Author: J. B. Everett
Book online «Resonance by J. B. Everett (books for 7th graders .TXT) đ». Author J. B. Everett
He was clenching his jaw by the time they arrived. Wheeling him inside, her eyes darted to Jordan, lying right where sheâd left him, not bothered by any of this. Leaving David on the metal gurney, she went about setting up.
Jillian stole bedsheets and cut them into strips. She lined up shots of pain medications and muscle relaxants.
She administered the doses and braided sheets while she waited for them to take effect. She ignored all the protocol about asking David what he wanted. She would fix him as best she could.
He could sue her later. Besides there were surely sunshine laws to cover malpractice during mass human extinctions.
When the dosing had done its job, Jillian shifted him to the mattressed bed pushed into the corner by Jordanâs, and warned David what she was doing just moments before she tied him to the frame. She palpated his hip and wished for an x-ray. But with a deep breath of acceptance she diagnosed that the pelvic girdle was broken. Without a team and an anesthesiologist, all she could do was bind it, and theyâd have to re-break and re-set it later.
With great care Jillian bound his hip as best she could and she went so far as to tie his knee to the bed, thinking she could stabilize it and still be able to reset the tib-fib. She explained as she went. And David was a good soldier, stoic and cooperative, following all her suggestions no matter how bizarre. So she looped a sheet carefully around his foot and ankle and pulled with all her small might, and accomplished nothing.
âWhat did you do?â
With lips pressed together in disappointment and thought, she turned back to her patient.
âIn your language I believe it would be expressed as âjack shitâ.â She turned away to think.
Then tried again. The third time she applied pressure by hanging back on the sheet, the weight of her borne completely by his lower leg, hoping to stretch it far enough that she could settle the snapped bones back into their rightful places. Her feet climbed, both leaving the floor, and she wasnât sure if sheâd be able to set his bones before she dislocated her own shoulders from the effort. But at last she managed enough pull and she felt her strength overcome the tension of his muscles and let the bones slide.
The hard part was in letting his leg slip back together gently. She couldnât afford to have them snap back into place and splinter or jam or, god forbid, miss and slide past each other again, causing more muscle tearing and tissue damage as they went. So her strength drained as she fought for control, and with a last sigh she realized the muscles were no longer fighting her. The bones had found each other again. She could let go.
Stopping to breathe for a few minutes, she make a quick makeshift splint then set about replacing Jordanâs IV bag. It was non-exerting work. Davidâs shoulder would have to wait, she didnât have even that simple procedure in her right now. Plus he was so doped up, it wasnât like he would know.
Jillian stayed clinical. She went to the cafeteria and fetched a few bananas, bottles of juice, sandwiches, and even a few cookies. With arms full, she wound her way through the slumbering tents back to David and Jordan.
David asked how the penguins were doing.
âFine.â She didnât look up. From the penguins question and the slightly slurred quality of speech the man was either seeing the birds or believed he was at the north pole.
Jordan didnât say anything. Just quietly submitted to the hand she laid palm down across his chest to be sure that he continued breathing.
Turning back to David, she rolled him, taking advantage of the muscle relaxants. With careful explanations that he ignored, Jillian educated him about the procedure. But the medications were working better than she had expected. He was of no help whatsoever. He agreed to everything, but couldnât even sit still. Worse, he tried to help - insisting on turning, sitting, and generally being a nuisance.
She promised him a cookie if he stayed still, and that, of all things seemed to work. But it didnât stop him from mooning at her like a lovesick calf.
âYou know youâre beautiful.â
What do you say to that? If you say ânoâ heâll just go on. âYes.â
âCan I touch you?â
âYou have no idea what youâre saying.â After she popped his shoulder into place she fitted him with a sling and proceeded to adjust it. Leaning over him she added an extra Velcro strap, thinking that goofboy might just do something stupid if he wasnât tied down.
âI know exsactly what Iâm sssaying. This medissine just took away my concerns about sssaying it.â
That was interesting. âWhat were those concerns, David?â
âThat jou would slllap me.â His tongue sounded thick, but that would pass as he sobered up. As would this.
âYou know, I think that was a good concern. â Hey!â She smacked his hand away from her butt, thinking that maybe a good slap was warranted. If she didnât leave a mark heâd never know better.
âI feel this way about you all the time.â A conspiratorial look on his face, he leaned far enough forward to risk falling off the gurney, which was the last thing she needed. God, the man was a danger to himself.
âYeah, well why donât you talk it over with the penguins?â
Confusion. Blessed confusion. He tried to gesture with his disabled arm, and seemed even more perturbed that it didnât move. âWhere did they go?â
âTheyâre visiting the back of your eyelids, David. You have to lie down and close your eyes for a long time.
The penguins will âŠâ This had to be good ⊠âpeck you when itâs time to open your eyes.â
âYeah.â He nodded, in complete agreement before slowly laying himself back. Closing his eyes carefully, he waited for the penguins.
If he hadnât been the last man on earth, she would have laughed. Instead she went outside looking for another gurney, and hauled it in. Keeping her gaze close to the ground, Jillian ignored the suits and med staff that were still visible in white and black against the grass. Those she hadnât moved yet. They would have to survive another night. She was exhausted.
It was the interrogation room of nightmares. Borne of too many cop movies. The light shone in his eyes obscuring everything else in the world.
He didnât even remember the world. Just that there were questions.
Voices were asking him things he couldnât answer. He pushed his arm up to shield his face, but it wouldnât come. He was rewarded with a sharp pain every time he tried to lift it. And he couldnât distinguish who was holding him down, who was speaking. Just the glare flooding his vision to the point of pain.
Jordan squeezed sore eyes tight to stop it, but the red glow permeated his eyelids, and snuck between every time he moved. The voice wouldnât shut up. He made a noise, the sound was painful to his own ears but it reoriented him.
Gravity was down, behind him. He was on his back, in bed.
With each time he squinted, he recognized more and more in the blobs around him. The light was sunlight, not artificial. The voice was to his left. The pain was in his left hand.
He moved it, snapping it painfully against something metal.
The bedrail.
He moaned.
âJordan!â
Her voice pierced the haze.
Jillian.
It was all he got to think before he felt her hands, soft and cool, on his arm. Her voice was asking for his open eyes. He tried to say her name, and was quite certain that he didnât achieve it.
But she responded like he had. âThatâs right, Iâm here. Itâs good to see you awake. I was getting worried.â
Donât worry about me.
But he couldnât form single words, let alone the whole thought.
It.
Heâd had it.
And heâd woken up. The realization expanded his lungs to full capacity, to gasp in surprise at his own survival. With the dawning came the idea that he had to get his eyes open no matter the cost. He fought the burning and the low, shallow sound that accompanied the forced vision. But he waited. And the first blob came into focus.
It was David, on the gurney beside him who had provided the interrogation, and was still at it. âAbellard! You are about the last one up. Donât worry, I kept our girl here company.â
Jillianâs voice cut through the haze, clearer than anything else around him. âYeah, you werenât much good as anything else.â
âOoh, baby, that hurts.â
As did the banter that they shared when he couldnât even see. But Jordan forced his eyelids wide, waiting while she became visible. Still a little fuzzy, Jillianâs smile was obvious.
Rapid blinks brought the world into sharp relief one painful frame at a time. The white of the canvas, bleeding in sunlight. The silver of the bed bars, used for children and the elderly. Or the comatose.
He considered asking to have them put down so he could feel human again, but the face that came into view was Davidâs and in a blink Jordan realized what was wrong. It looked like David had gotten in bad with the mob. âDavid?â
âYeah?â David shrugged, with only one shoulder. âIn your professional opinion I am fucked-up, huh?â
âWhat happened?â
Jordan missed the first part of the explanation, simply because he was shocked he had spoken and David had answered. Despite the feeling that his mouth was stuffed with moldy gauze, he was articulate.
â-down the stairs. The rest is pretty obvious.â
âStairs?â He tried to lift his head, and it took a moment to realize the blue that had settled beside him was Jillian in her scrubs, her palm flat against his forehead holding him immobile.
âDonât try to sit up yet.â
But he wanted to hear about these mythical stairs that had started wailing on David while he himself had slumbered on.
David pointed with his unslung arm, still dressed in doctors scrubs, although by now Jordan was sure that everyone knew he wasnât a physician. âThe last flight. Iâd just woken up and was weak. I was trying to get to Jillian. And I slipped.â His finger gestured beyond the tents and Jordan recalled the long, tall stairwell that led up to the classrooms on top of the hill.
âYou fell down the stairs?â
The world was undergoing a phenomenal change, the likes of which had not been witnessed by humans of any kind before. And David fell down the stairs?
Jillianâs voice added in. âHe was basically useless. Which sucked because he and I were the only ones awake for two days. We came right out of it.â
His gut twisted, although in relief or fear, he was uncertain. âYou were immune.â
âWell, we went under. I donât know that Iâd call it immunity.â Again she pressed her hand flat to him, this time across his chest, and it was embarrassingly easy for her to push him back down. He hadnât even realized that heâd been trying to sit up. âI did blood tests out the wazoo⊠weâve got nothing that I can find.â
The way Jordan figured it, if she couldnât find the pattern, it didnât exist.
Licking the roof of his mouth, he tried to ready it to speak again. But Jillian saw him and went into action. Propping the head of his bed slightly she pushed his pillow into place and handed him a small cup of juice.
Positively heavenly, it made up for the abrasion of the invalid treatment. If heâd been strong enough he would have told her to quit. But, well, that was the point wasnât it?
After a second cup, he found his voice and spoke over the questions David was still asking.
âWho else?â
Her chest moved visibly. âWell âŠâ
He could see the gears. She needed to find a place to start and that meant there was a lot.
âI canât get Landerly on the phone. I think heâs under.â She busied her hands, drawing a dose
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