Impuls
Шрифт:
– She's up, she's down, she's having a seizure! – Emily yells out, afraid that one more violent spasm and she just can't hold it.
– On the side of her," immediately commands the neurosurgeon, switching places with the nurse. – Ten cc's of Pherocipam! Why did you even let her get up?
– They're prepping her for discharge. – Emily breaks off the ampoule and fills the syringe. – Where is everybody?
– I have no idea… Oh, shit!
The drug is administered immediately, without failing, only instead of strengthening the process of inhibition in the central nervous system, it works exactly the opposite. There is a crunch, the patient bends her whole body – and falls down, falling over. Emily sees a thin stream of blood pouring from her mouth; another trickle trickles from under the bandages not completely removed from her head.
Clark palms the call buttons at the head of the neighboring beds, and they go off instantly, filling the room with a bright red glow; somewhere in the back of Emily's mind, she flashes the thought that it never happened the first time – the button must not have worked – but it slips away too quickly.
Emily sees everything that happens from the outside – here comes the resuscitation team rushing in, here is Clark, shouting, pushing the gurney with everyone else, and here is herself – white as a sheet, with only one thought – what if she did something wrong…?
– There could be anything. – They rush into the elevator. – Let's get her to the O.R. We'll take it from there. Johnson, you're dismissed.
Emily can only stand and watch as the heavy elevator doors slowly close, cutting off her face Clark, on which – Emily would have sworn – written in panic.
In her gut, she knows something has gone wrong.
* * *
The sleepless night before the exam, the chronic lack of sleep and malnutrition of recent days, the inhuman regime brings dizziness, weakness and nausea into Emily's life; she gets carsick on the bus so bad that she has to get off two stops early and walk, wading through the crowds of people rushing to the subway.
Emily tries to count the number of cups of coffee she's had in the last two days, and she loses it at ten. Her stomach rumbles pitifully: she doesn't have time to cook, and she can't eat enough sandwiches from small shops.
And Emily doesn't have much money, but she'll get a big raise if she passes her exams.
If only she could survive the day, the nurse thought, and her fingers touched the wooden cross on her breast.
As she enters, Olivia shouts at her:
– Johnson, Dr. Moss is looking for you, urgently. Told me to come see him as soon as you got here.
Emily looks at her watch: the exam is a little less than half an hour away. Maybe she can make it to neurology in time, except…
– I told her not to change," Olivia adds guiltily. – I'm sorry, I don't know what's wrong with him.
The nurse shrugs her shoulders – after all, there are locker rooms in the study block too, though not as spacious, but if anything, she will change there very quickly; or still have time to run to her department.
But Moss?
What could a neurologist possibly need from a simple nurse he'd seen once in his life?
Andrew Moss has dark hair, expensive-rimmed glasses, and a watch that screams more value than the house Emily lives in. In his perfectly clean red-and-white office, the neurologist seems like the Red Queen, waiting to have her head blown off her shoulders.
In the chair in front of him sits a frowning Clark – purple chiffon blouse, navy blue jeans, timeless pumps; behind her stands Melissa, and her heavy gaze does not bode well.
Mentally, Emily pulls out some reflective foil and wraps herself in it from head to toe.
The electronic clock on the wall reads twenty-ten-it's a little over a quarter of an hour until the exam.
– Miss Johnson," Moss folded the fingers of both hands in a triangle, "we won't keep you long, don't worry. I suppose you're wondering why you're here? – Nod. – Since Professor Ray's death, I'm temporarily acting his duties until a new chief physician is appointed.
Clark barely twitches.
* * *
The sleepless night before the exam, the chronic lack of sleep and malnutrition of the last few days, and the inhuman regimen of the last two days bring dizziness, weakness, and nausea into Emily's life; she gets so sick on the bus that she has to get off two stops early and walk, wading through the crowds of people rushing to the subway.
Emily tries to count the number of cups of coffee she's had in the last two days, and she loses it at ten. Her stomach rumbles pitifully: she doesn't have time to cook, and she can't eat enough sandwiches from small shops.
And Emily doesn't have much money, but she'll get a big raise if she passes her exams.
If only she could survive the day, the nurse thought, and her fingers touched the wooden cross on her breast.
As she enters, Olivia shouts at her:
– Johnson, Dr. Moss is looking for you, urgently. Told me to come see him as soon as you got here.
Emily looks at her watch: the exam is a little less than half an hour away. Maybe she can make it to neurology in time, except…
– I told her not to change," Olivia adds guiltily. – I'm sorry, I don't know what's wrong with him.
The nurse shrugs her shoulders – after all, there are locker rooms in the study block too, though not as spacious, but if anything, she will change there very quickly; or still have time to run to her department.
But Moss?
What could a neurologist possibly need from a simple nurse he'd seen once in his life?
Andrew Moss has dark hair, expensive-rimmed glasses, and a watch that screams more value than the house Emily lives in. In his perfectly clean red-and-white office, the neurologist seems like the Red Queen, waiting to have her head blown off her shoulders.