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Posted: Tue May 03, 2011 5:19 pm
The gurney Laney was sitting on had a wobbly wheel. Laney always seemed to have the terrible luck of wobbly wheels: it was her curse in supermarkets especially, every cart she steered trying hard to veer itself left or right on that damned wobbly wheel. It squeaked when it moved, just the sort of garish noise that was so often synonymous with Laney's presence itself. She was a wobbly wheel -- generally it rolled like wheels were supposed to, but with non-stop fidgeting and always getting itself off-course. She was prone to tangents.
Actually, she wished she'd gone off on a tangent clear out of this hospital, if the truth were to be told. The hospital reminded her of things she had no particular care for. She'd lost more than a year of her life -- her stupid, dead-end life -- sleeping under its flickering flourescents. Laney hated everything neat and orderly and regimental about it now, from the meals that came at the same times daily, compartmentalized into sections on the orange plastic tray, to the lights that shuttered off mercilessly at ten o'clock at night. She hated the bedtime, and the sleeping -- God, the sleeping! -- and every night, she had fought against the downward sink of unconsciousness pulling her down.
The next one will be permanent, her mind always seemed to warn. The next time, you won't wake up. Not everyone has a right to a tomorrow.
So instead of sleeping, she napped now -- her cell phone alarm ringing her safely awake after two hours at a stretch -- from ten to midnight, from four to six, from ten to noon, and from four to six again. Maybe it was meaningless. Maybe, as the internet suggested, it was unhealthy. But it was within her control -- and that feeling was heady and addictive. Every time she forced herself awake and out of bed, or off the couch, in the face of the exhaustion and the slightly queasy feeling, was a victory.
She hated it here at the hospital, hated all their tests and their charts and the way it all made her feel powerless and unsure again. She was tired of measurements. There were so many measurements.
And Laney was tired of waiting. Hospitals were never prompt -- she'd been sitting outside the MRI room for the last twenty-five minutes, dangling her feet back and forth off the side of a gurney, her usual cheerful face on, in hopes of attracting company. Waiting was so lonely. Across the way was a flatscreen television, and although at first she'd been relieved to have it there, she soon realized it was just playing a six-minute loop of drug commercials and health advisories. Was she watching her cholesterol? Did she know that fifteen minutes a day outdoors could stave off a Vitamin D deficiency? Had she heard about the benefits of Levitra? Well, she had now.
Someone turned the corner to come down the hall, and Laney's ears perked up immediately. A doctor, finally? No -- she was too young, unless Doogie Howser, M.D. had come stunningly to life in the body of a young girl. That was unlikely. Still, she was someone, a real live human person, and Laney was feeling as desperate as she ever had.
"Hi," she called out from her gurney, waving one hand and both legs. "Hi! What are you in for?"
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Posted: Tue May 03, 2011 10:09 pm
Marcella liked the hospital for all the reasons that Laney hated it. The girl took comfort in the order, and though the pace of things could definitely get stressful, at least she was not idle when she was working there.
There were some parts that irked her anyway, though. Usually, they had to do with things that were very important and always seemed to need doing, because there did not appear to be anyone else to take care of them ever. There seemed to be quite a bit of that, with how the need for the hospital had increased considerably in the last few years, and the staff had not quite been augmented to compensate.
Well, at least they had Marcella now. Apparently to take charts from deparment to department. She would grin and bear it for now, though, since really, this internship was important to her education. And she was gaining great insight into just what a pain it could be to work in a place like this.
Marcella hoped that, by the time she had her medical degree, she would be able to hire interns of her own to take care of things like delivering medical charts to the MRI department. It sounded like the poor patient whose chart was on top was supposed to have had her MRI started some twenty minutes ago. And who knew how long the stack of charts had been sitting on the counter before Marcella had been directed to take them down here.
She glanced over to the girl seated on the gurney as she passed, and flashed a quick smile as she hurried to hand off the paperwork to the receptionist in charge of this department; it took the brown-haired girl a second to realize that she was the one being addressed, though. Marcella returned to the gurney's side once everything was delivered as it should have been at least twenty minutes ago, and offered a more apologetic look.
"Oh, I'm just dropping off some papers," she replied, reaching up to fix one of the sleeves on her scrubs. "Is there anything I can help you with?"
The name on the top chart had been "Landscape", and Marcella was not at all sure what sort of person to expect to be attached to it, but she still wondered if this girl was the one who had been kept waiting. Best to try to offer what help she could to make up for the delay; if nothing else it would give the people at Diagnostic Imaging a few extra minutes to realize if they had any outstanding deliveries of their own.
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