"Uhh. I suspect I am going to need a caffeine drip for the day ahead." I closed my eyes as I took another long draught. Really, nothing beats a good cup of coffee.
"Yes, I heard about the encephalitis outbreak on the news. Do you think you will be looking after them?"
"There's a good chance of it. I'm just worried that the shortage of staff at the moment will mean that I am going to have to work a double shift." I sighed. "I'm supposed to finish at 7pm but if I'm not here by 8.00..."
Kaye grinned. "Feed 'em and bed 'em. Yeah, I know."
With a glance at my watch, I finished off my coffee and went inside to bid farewell to my babies. Needless to say, they brushed me off with a hasty goodbye and returned to their game with their cousins, Beth and Allie. I grinned to myself as I returned to my car. At least I didn't have to go to work worrying about separation anxiety.
3
After dropping Michele off in town, I only just made it to work on time. Fortunately, this early in the day, the ER was relatively quiet. By the time I clocked in, there were four patients being examined in the cubicles and several more waiting in the triage room. Asking around, I found out the first lot of encephalitis patients would be arriving soon.
As I checked the status of available beds on the computer, Emma dumped records on the counter beside me with a heavy sigh. "How much longer have we got on this shift?"
"Let's see." I glanced deliberately at my watch. "Our shift started half an hour ago so...only eleven and a half hours to go!"
She heaved another dramatic sigh as she reknotted her auburn hair.
"Why? Got somewhere else to be?" I asked, amused. Emma's drama-filled love life had been the source of much vicarious entertainment for me over the years. At twenty-eight, she loved to complain about how hard it was to find Mr. Right while, it seemed to me, she thoroughly enjoyed all the angst and uncertainty that came with the search.
Before Emma could start her latest tale of woe, Dr Wilson hurried by and beckoned to us for assistance. The ER doors opened and the paramedics hurried in with one of the encephalitis patients. I recognised one of the paramedics, Big Dave. A gentle giant, Dave had a wad of bandages pressed over a wound in his neck.
As he related medical information to Dr Wilson, I got my first good look at the patient. A man of about forty with dark, curly hair, strongly built, he was fighting his restraints, tossing his body to and fro as he moaned. As he turned to face me, a shiver went down my spine. For all his tortured movements, there was a complete lack of any pain or any emotion in his eyes. I had never seen anything like it.
Emma patted his hand hesitantly. "You will be fine, sir. Just relax."
With a sudden twist of his body, he lunged across at her, teeth snapping violently together. Emma jerked away with a startled gasp. Groaning, he sank back on the gurney.
"Watch it." Dave glanced over at her. "This guy has already taken a chunk out of me." He instinctively reached up to touch the bloodstained bandage on his neck.
"I'm having trouble finding his pulse." Dr Wilson mumbled, a frown of concentration on his wrinkled face.
He turned back as Dave completed his report. "This patient presented with a high fever, severe headache and confusion. He went into cardiac arrest half an hour ago. We successfully revived him but he began displaying extreme aggression and irrationality. As you can see, he managed to get a couple of bites in before we were able to physically restrain him. Skin is cold and clammy, pupils fully dilated, temp is..." Dave hesitated. "low. Sedation was unsuccessful."
Dr Wilson frowned. "Unsuccessful?"
The paramedic shrugged. "Two doses - no effect."
The doctor raised his brow but didn't comment further as he headed off with the patient to the isolation ward. Emma and I watched in bemused silence as the patient continued to struggle down the corridor.
"What do you make of that?" Emma asked.
I shrugged noncommittally, trying to ignore the uneasy feeling in my gut. "Encephalitis has been known to make people aggressive."
She looked at me incredulously. "Ok, Lori, but did you see his eyes?! Creepy!"
Looking sideways at her, my lips twitched. "Is that your professional diagnosis? Creepy?"
She flicked a rude gesture at me in response.
A yell jerked our heads around, to see more encephalitis patients being wheeled in, also struggling against their restraints. Another bleeding paramedic called for assistance. Nurses and doctors hurried over. I got a glimpse of blank eyes, bloodless skin and clawed hands as the trolleys passed by. Emma raised her eyebrows at me as she hastened after them, promising further discussion over coffee later.
I shook myself and walked over to Dave. "Come on, let's take a look at that wound." Dave obediently allowed himself to be led into a room and sat thankfully on a bed.
"Never seen anything like that before in my life." He muttered.
I glanced at him as I gathered my supplies. "Really? You know encephalitis can cause aggression and confusion."
Dave shook his head. "This is something else, Lori. I swear, this guy tried to
eat
me."
I laughed as I sat down beside him. "Come on, Dave. Never heard of a virus turning people into cannibals!"
The big man shrugged. "Yeah, well, I'm the one who had to watch this guy chewing on the piece of flesh he tore from my neck. He was drooling and chomping and watching me the whole time like I was a giant piece of meat dangling just out of reach...it was unnatural."
I shuddered. "Quit it, Dave. That's gross." I pulled away the bandage and whistled. The patient had managed to tear a substantial chunk out of Dave's neck; nothing vital, fortunately. "You are going to need some serious stitches, my friend."
"Yeah, I kinda figured that."
We sat in silence for several minutes as I cleaned the wound. Dave clearly had something on his mind as he kept clearing his throat and opening his mouth to speak, then shutting it. Finally, I sighed in exasperation and met his blue eyes firmly. "Just spit it out, for goodness sakes."
Dave straightened his shoulders decisively. "Lori, that guy
died
."
"Yes, and you revived him. What about it?"
He looked a little embarrassed. "The thing is we didn't succeed in bringing him back. We'd given up. The next minute he was attacking us."
"Okay." I frowned. "Odd, but spontaneous revival has happened before."
Dave met my eyes. "I saw the heart monitor. Even when we were struggling to strap him down, the monitor remained flat lined."
I blinked. "Well, it had to be broken."
"Yeah. That's what I thought. Until I talked to the other guys over the CB and found that the same thing had happened to them. What are the odds that all the monitors in all the ambulances were broken?"
****
When I left Dave, I was feeling a little worried. He had started to run a mild temperature. Bites are notoriously full of bacteria. After giving him a dose of antibiotics, I made him promise to go home and rest.
As I made my way down the hall, I ran into Emma. She was bouncy with wide-eyed excitement. "Those miners are completely insane, I'm afraid! It took six of us to get them into in the isolation beds. A couple of the nurses even got bitten, nothing serious, mind you. Now we've all got to wear protective gear around the patients." She chattered on eagerly as an avid audience of nurses grew around her. "We can't even sedate them; nothing seems to work. Poor things seem to be mad with the pain."
"So what's the treatment plan?" A nearby nurse asked.
Emma shrugged. "Standard procedures for treating encephalitis but it will take a while to see if it is working. In the meantime all we can do is try to make them comfortable. Anyway, I have to get back."
She looked over at me. "Meet you at lunch, Lori?"
"You bet. You know how I love cafeteria food. Highlight of my day."
Laughing, Emma wagged her finger at me. "Still living on the edge, I see."
I returned to the office and took a quick look at the board. Several people had presented with symptoms of possible encephalitis but that always happened when an alert went out. People started seeing serious symptoms in the common cold.
The sound of a rough cough startled me. I was surprised to see Dave leaning against the doorway and alarmed to see how unwell he looked. The wound on his neck had been freshly bandaged. I hurried over and pressed my hand to his forehead. It was burning hot. His eyes seemed bleary as he tried to focus on me.
"Hey Lori, I think maybe that bugger gave me some nasty infection..."
"Let me look at it." I took his arm firmly and led him back inside. He lay down gratefully on the bed. "How long have you been running this fever?"
"About half an hour, I suppose. And I've got a hell of a headache." He groaned. "I've been trying to find someone to give me some damned pills so I can go home to bed."
"You're not going anywhere, mister, at least not until you've been seen by another doctor." I said even as my thoughts raced through the possibilities. Could this be encephalitis? Could it develop this quickly?
Dave moaned in protest. "What did I do to deserve that?!"
I poked him lightly in the arm. "If you can still make jokes, there's hope for you yet."
I left him dozing while I hunted down a doctor. Dr Bennett stood at the nurse's counter filling in a form, and with a little persuasion, agreed to examine Dave.
As I went to follow her, she shooed me away. "The triage nurse could do with some help. The waiting room is filling up with neurotic parents and hypochondriacs who are convinced that they've got this encephalitis bug."
I gritted my teeth and left her to it. Truth be, there was a backlog of sniffling, groaning patients in the waiting room now, and I knew that Dave was in good, if irritating, hands. I'd always found Dr Bennett with her Margaret Thatcher hair and condescending attitude a pain but I couldn't fault her expertise.
After sending home two patients with the cold and referring another patient who actually could have the virus, I noticed a sudden flurry of activity as nurses and doctors rushed past my door.
"Excuse me." I murmured to the young patient I was with and hurried out. In the hallway, there seemed to be struggle going on. I heard a groan that sent a chill down my back.
A lump in the pit of my stomach formed as I heard that drawn out moan again.
It couldn't be.
As I neared, I saw that the staff had someone pinned on the floor outside the room I had left Dave in. Dr Bennett stood near by, her perfect hair mussed, face flushed and deep scratches on her cheeks. She glanced up at me and acknowledged silently what I had dreaded: it was Dave struggling on the floor under two men and two women.
"What happened?" I rushed forward to help them.
Dr Bennett grabbed my arm and pulled me back. "He fainted. While we were attending him, he tried to attack me and a nurse."
There was a scream of pain from one of orderlies. "The son of a bitch bit me!"
He leapt up clutching his neck and I saw Dave looking up at me. But it wasn't Dave. Gone was the laid back, cheeky man I had worked with for years and in his place was ...blankness. With the pasty skin and the dead eyes, I knew without doubt that the same virus that had ravaged the miners had infected him.
Dave's empty eyes shifted to the woman holding his left arm.
"Don't let him bite you!" I called out urgently.
The woman instinctively released her hold, and scrambled back. The remaining two men struggled to hold Dave down as he grunted and writhed and snapped viciously at them.
"Hey, I can't hang on much longer!" One of the men pinning him down cried out. "Jab him with something, will you?!"
Dr Bennett grabbed an injection off a nearby trolley and pumped the full syringe into his thigh. "He should be out in a couple of minutes." She said with satisfaction.
I knelt beside her, pinning down Dave's convulsing legs. "Dr Bennett, if this is the same virus as the encephalitis patients, sedation probably won't work."
"Where the hell is security?!" Dr Bennett yelled out before turning to me in irritation. "Well, we can't very well sit on him indefinitely, can we? Go find security. He needs to be properly restrained before he hurts someone else or himself."
Ignoring a flare of anger at her tone, I edged around Dave cautiously. As I passed the injured orderly, I paused to tell him to disinfect the wound and get checked out immediately by a doctor. If this was the virus, it had taken less than two hours from the time of the bite for the infection to reach Dave's brain. That was impossibly fast. Maybe Joe was right about the threat of an epidemic, after all. How I wished I could talk to him.
For some reason, there was not a single security guard on the floor. I decided to head upstairs to the isolation ward. Maybe the guards had been called in to deal with more outbreaks of aggression. However, there was no one at the nurses' station outside the ward, which was odd in itself. Nibbling on my lip tentatively, I pushed the doors open. The silence that greeted me was unnerving at first, but the sound I finally heard chilled me to the bone. I didn't recognise it at first but as it got closer, I suddenly realised what I was hearing.