08-26-2013, 10:39 AM
Saturday, 24 August
A woman asking after Mr. Echeverría went into his room just past eight o'clock in the morning and left maybe ten minutes later. Not even. Went in just after the nurse making her rounds through the unit did. She held her hand over her nose and looked as if she had been weeping and the charge nurse thought nothing of it. Pretty and dark-haired, blue-eyed, in her thirties. Must have been one of his parishioners.
He came to with a silver thumb ring on his thinnest finger.
His heart rate and blood pressure and oxygen saturation levels all bottomed out and stopped at once. Upon further inspection the nurse found him broken through sedation, wrists freed. Triangular cloth bandages once tied to his wrists now tangled in with everything else. He had yanked off the electrodes taped to his chest and was removing himself from the rest of the tubes gone into his body when a silent alarm summoned a small cavalry.
For the first time since they wheeled him in here Echeverría had the appearance of one in possession of at least some of his mental faculties. When the nurse came towards him he held a palm out to her though he could not extend his fingers and his entire arm shook. To her it looked like he was trying to reassure her. He was pale and his hair was dirty and he could not catch and keep his breath even before he pulled the nasal cannula off his face.
Footsteps in the corridor. The boots of the security guards and the clogs of other nurses.
"Mister Echeverría--"
"¿Dónde estoy?" The nurse didn't answer. He said again: "Where am I?"
The door slid back further. He couldn't fight them off but they were not Technocratic agents. In the midst of them stood Ana Sánchez. At the sight of him upright she sighed and held up a hand to keep everyone else back. They left the room and she slid it shut behind them. Pan sat on the edge of the mattress and sweated for the pain in his midsection.
"What you think you're gonna do, huh?" she asked. "Hobble out of here with no pants and get on a bus?"
"I don't like hospitals."
"That's nice. Hospital's been keeping you alive the last week and a half."
"You were there. You know what happens in these places."
"I thought you said that... war, or whatever it was, was over."
"Claro, perdimos, pero eso no significa nada."
She stepped forward to raise the head of the bed so he could lie back. Were not for the rush of blood from his head he would have stayed upright. He closed his eyes until the swimming stopped and when he opened them again Ana had thrown the sheet across his lower body and locked her arms across her chest.
"What day is it, Francisco?"
"I don't know."
"What about the month?"
"I don't know."
"Who's the President of the United States?"
"The Democrat."
"And where are you?"
"The hospital."
"Which hospital."
"The one you work at."
"Uh huh."
"Why am I in here?"
Ana set her hands on her hips and lifted her eyebrows. Tilted her chin towards the bandage over his midsection.
"That," she said, "and you were bleeding into your brain."
"So that's why I don't feel so hot."
"Uh huh."
"Traigáme el papeleo, voy a casa."
"Oh, you think so?"
"Yeah."
"You're gonna feel a whole lot worse if you keep unplugging everything, Reverend I-Don't-Need-No-Doctor."
"I don't."
"No inventes, Pancho."
"No estoy."
"Yeah. No estoy. Don't know what month it is or how you got here but you think you're gonna sign papers and walk out of here."
"I am."
"Not right this second you aren't. We gotta talk to the doctor and find someone to drive you."
He drew a breath to argue and coughed instead.
"Throat a little dry?" she asked. "You were on a ventilator for four days. Don't move till I get back, you try and walk outta here you're gonna be right back on it in about twelve hours."
Pendejo estupido, she didn't say. She hadn't called him that since they were kids and if he were more coherent he would have heard it in her tone anyway. Pan went back to sleep and Ana hauled the door shut behind her.
Monday, 26 August
A battery of tests confirmed Echeverría was orientated to time and place and did not need oxygen therapy anymore but he was easily fatigued and prone to headaches and showed other neurocognitive symptoms of the event he'd survived. "Subarachnoid hemorrhage" was a phrase the doctors kept using.
After a long consultation with the nurse manager, the attending instructed the nurses to remove the various tubes and lines plugged into his body. They removed the stent from his abdomen. The IV would stay in his elbow until he went home. They moved him to a less intensive unit Sunday night. If he could behave himself there he could go home Tuesday morning.
---
Patience is a virtue and one he struggles with even as an ordained clergyman. But he does not try to break out again. They let whoever wants to come in to see him come in during visiting hours. The parishioners have sent flowers and candles and cards and more of them come in on Monday than were at his bedside on Friday because they know he is coming home soon.
Tuesday, 27 August
In the morning a nurse he has never met before will come in with a clipboard of papers and go over each one before she lets the priest sign them. He will be sitting on the edge of the bed in the cowboy boots and black jeans and button-down shirt that Rosa will bring for him and help him put on because he still has a healing wound in his gut. She will stand out in the hallway during this interaction.
Part of her will hope the nurse talks him into staying. He has visibly lost weight just in two weeks and they will be going over the risks if he leaves now and doesn't cooperate with the home health aide they've hired for him or go to his outpatient appointments: Cognitive deterioration. Infection. Sepsis. Death.
The priest will thank her for telling him all of this and then he will sign the paperwork and let her help him into a wheelchair. They will wheel him out of the hospital with Rosa carrying everything but the silver band someone left for him on Saturday. That he will keep on his finger.
In Rosa's sedan he will sit in the passenger seat and breathe heavy and not complain. Rosa will get in behind the wheel after she loads the trunk with the things she carried for him and then sigh.
"You are so stupid," she will say to him, and then she will take him not back to the rectory but to the Chantry.
A woman asking after Mr. Echeverría went into his room just past eight o'clock in the morning and left maybe ten minutes later. Not even. Went in just after the nurse making her rounds through the unit did. She held her hand over her nose and looked as if she had been weeping and the charge nurse thought nothing of it. Pretty and dark-haired, blue-eyed, in her thirties. Must have been one of his parishioners.
He came to with a silver thumb ring on his thinnest finger.
His heart rate and blood pressure and oxygen saturation levels all bottomed out and stopped at once. Upon further inspection the nurse found him broken through sedation, wrists freed. Triangular cloth bandages once tied to his wrists now tangled in with everything else. He had yanked off the electrodes taped to his chest and was removing himself from the rest of the tubes gone into his body when a silent alarm summoned a small cavalry.
For the first time since they wheeled him in here Echeverría had the appearance of one in possession of at least some of his mental faculties. When the nurse came towards him he held a palm out to her though he could not extend his fingers and his entire arm shook. To her it looked like he was trying to reassure her. He was pale and his hair was dirty and he could not catch and keep his breath even before he pulled the nasal cannula off his face.
Footsteps in the corridor. The boots of the security guards and the clogs of other nurses.
"Mister Echeverría--"
"¿Dónde estoy?" The nurse didn't answer. He said again: "Where am I?"
The door slid back further. He couldn't fight them off but they were not Technocratic agents. In the midst of them stood Ana Sánchez. At the sight of him upright she sighed and held up a hand to keep everyone else back. They left the room and she slid it shut behind them. Pan sat on the edge of the mattress and sweated for the pain in his midsection.
"What you think you're gonna do, huh?" she asked. "Hobble out of here with no pants and get on a bus?"
"I don't like hospitals."
"That's nice. Hospital's been keeping you alive the last week and a half."
"You were there. You know what happens in these places."
"I thought you said that... war, or whatever it was, was over."
"Claro, perdimos, pero eso no significa nada."
She stepped forward to raise the head of the bed so he could lie back. Were not for the rush of blood from his head he would have stayed upright. He closed his eyes until the swimming stopped and when he opened them again Ana had thrown the sheet across his lower body and locked her arms across her chest.
"What day is it, Francisco?"
"I don't know."
"What about the month?"
"I don't know."
"Who's the President of the United States?"
"The Democrat."
"And where are you?"
"The hospital."
"Which hospital."
"The one you work at."
"Uh huh."
"Why am I in here?"
Ana set her hands on her hips and lifted her eyebrows. Tilted her chin towards the bandage over his midsection.
"That," she said, "and you were bleeding into your brain."
"So that's why I don't feel so hot."
"Uh huh."
"Traigáme el papeleo, voy a casa."
"Oh, you think so?"
"Yeah."
"You're gonna feel a whole lot worse if you keep unplugging everything, Reverend I-Don't-Need-No-Doctor."
"I don't."
"No inventes, Pancho."
"No estoy."
"Yeah. No estoy. Don't know what month it is or how you got here but you think you're gonna sign papers and walk out of here."
"I am."
"Not right this second you aren't. We gotta talk to the doctor and find someone to drive you."
He drew a breath to argue and coughed instead.
"Throat a little dry?" she asked. "You were on a ventilator for four days. Don't move till I get back, you try and walk outta here you're gonna be right back on it in about twelve hours."
Pendejo estupido, she didn't say. She hadn't called him that since they were kids and if he were more coherent he would have heard it in her tone anyway. Pan went back to sleep and Ana hauled the door shut behind her.
Monday, 26 August
A battery of tests confirmed Echeverría was orientated to time and place and did not need oxygen therapy anymore but he was easily fatigued and prone to headaches and showed other neurocognitive symptoms of the event he'd survived. "Subarachnoid hemorrhage" was a phrase the doctors kept using.
After a long consultation with the nurse manager, the attending instructed the nurses to remove the various tubes and lines plugged into his body. They removed the stent from his abdomen. The IV would stay in his elbow until he went home. They moved him to a less intensive unit Sunday night. If he could behave himself there he could go home Tuesday morning.
---
Patience is a virtue and one he struggles with even as an ordained clergyman. But he does not try to break out again. They let whoever wants to come in to see him come in during visiting hours. The parishioners have sent flowers and candles and cards and more of them come in on Monday than were at his bedside on Friday because they know he is coming home soon.
Tuesday, 27 August
In the morning a nurse he has never met before will come in with a clipboard of papers and go over each one before she lets the priest sign them. He will be sitting on the edge of the bed in the cowboy boots and black jeans and button-down shirt that Rosa will bring for him and help him put on because he still has a healing wound in his gut. She will stand out in the hallway during this interaction.
Part of her will hope the nurse talks him into staying. He has visibly lost weight just in two weeks and they will be going over the risks if he leaves now and doesn't cooperate with the home health aide they've hired for him or go to his outpatient appointments: Cognitive deterioration. Infection. Sepsis. Death.
The priest will thank her for telling him all of this and then he will sign the paperwork and let her help him into a wheelchair. They will wheel him out of the hospital with Rosa carrying everything but the silver band someone left for him on Saturday. That he will keep on his finger.
In Rosa's sedan he will sit in the passenger seat and breathe heavy and not complain. Rosa will get in behind the wheel after she loads the trunk with the things she carried for him and then sigh.
"You are so stupid," she will say to him, and then she will take him not back to the rectory but to the Chantry.