126952.fb2 Sudden Independents - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 36

Sudden Independents - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 36

Jimmy suspected he sounded brave but he was barely holding his bladder in check. Broken ribs, punctured lung. He couldn’t even do his daily plague self-checkup because there were so many different aches and pains.

Luis searched through his medical library and selected one book from a shelf. Then he sat at his desk, flipping pages and murmuring to himself.

Ginger pinched her eyebrows together in a tight knot. Jimmy squeezed her hand again. Her fear was bright when she looked at him. She averted her eyes to their clasped hands and returned his squeeze.

“It’s going to be okay,” Jimmy said. “Luis’s got the brains and the nerve to handle this.”

She touched his lips. “Shush. Don’t talk so much. Save your strength.”

He kissed her fingers and earned a smile for the effort. She caressed his cheek.

Ten minutes passed. “Luis?” Jimmy said.

Luis glanced at him over the cover of his book, perturbed. “What?”

“What’s the word?”

“Thoracentesis.”

“What the hell does that mean?” Ginger said. She shrugged apologies at their shocked expressions. Jimmy never heard Ginger curse before; he kind of liked it.

He nodded at Luis. “What she said.”

Luis ran his finger through the page he’d been reading and garbled a bunch of words at him. “Basically, the puncture caused fluid to seep into your lung, hampering their normal function. I have to insert a hollow needle into the pleural cavity of your chest in order to drain the fluid and allow the oxygen to re-inflate your lung. After that, the hole will heal on its own.”

Jimmy said, “Is that all.” His bladder tingled.

“Pretty much,” Luis replied, placing the book on his desk. “Now I just have to find everything I need. Ginger, can you give me a hand?”

Ginger planted a tender kiss on Jimmy’s cheek before leaving. He closed his eyes. Her floral scent reminded him of fabric softener and suddenly he was five years old again, swimming in a pile of warm laundry fresh from the dryer while his mom chided him. Five-year-old Jimmy giggled and hunkered deeper into the soft, warm folds of fabric. Then his mother grabbed his leg and pulled him out, wrapping him in a hug and kissing him on the cheek.

“Lidocaine,” Luis’s voice invaded his happy memory. “I know I have some Lidocaine around here somewhere.” The sound of glass clinked together. “Ah, there it is.”

Jimmy scooped up a runaway tear and kept it hidden in his hand. He stared through the window blinds at Sunday morning on Main Street, which was empty from its usual herd of kids playing outside; chased indoors by the cold.

Ginger gently lifted his arm. “I have to take your blood pressure.” She looped the cuff around his arm and pumped the air bubble. She counted with the cold stethoscope pressed against his muscle. The pressure in the cuff released with a snake’s hiss.

“When did you learn to do that?”

Ginger ripped the cuff loose. “When Vanessa had little David.” She called to Luis, “One-sixty over ninety-five.”

Jimmy asked, “Is that bad?”

“It’s not good,” Luis said from an open closet across the room. “But it’s to be expected in your current condition.”

Luis rolled a metal table over with a squeaky wheel. Silver knives, needles, vials and a clear plastic tube rested on top. He nodded Jimmy’s way. “Don’t worry, everything is sterile.”

“Yeah, that’s my number-one worry right now.” Jimmy closed his eyes again. “Let’s do this thing.”

“Ginger, hold his arm up and keep it there.”

Ginger gripped Jimmy’s wrist firmly. Something cold and wet brushed against his side.

“That tickles.”

“I’m killing germs by swabbing iodine around the area where I’ll make the incision.”

The word incision made Jimmy shudder. A moment later, he heard clothes being wrestled on. When he heard snapping, he had to look. Luis was wrapped head to toe in baby blue with a mask over his mouth and a blue cap on his head. A clean pair of rubber gloves covered his hands. The young doctor inserted a long needle into a glass bottle and filled the syringe with a clear liquid. Jimmy clamped his eyes shut.

“This will numb the pain,” Luis said. “It’s going to sting for a second.”

The shot stung like a fifty-pound hornet-and did little to numb the pain that followed.

Scout knew they were too late as he followed Hunter across the field to the farmhouse. The incapacitated truck and knocked-over motorbikes still lined the northern wall. The backdoor hung open. The kids they were after had scuttled out and were gone.

They rode up to the vehicles and dismounted. Scout and Hunter walked with the heads down and studied the ground, following different sets of tire tracks that led from the house.

Scout pointed. “These look the freshest. They’re also the only ones heading away from Independents.”

“Nobody’s here,” Samuel reported coming out of the house. “What now?”

Hunter said, “Get back behind the wheel. We’re going to follow these tracks. We’ll probably make sudden stops if we lose the trail. Don’t run us over.”

The tracks led off to the south towards the Kansas state line. Scout shook his head. “There’s no way this group came from Iowa.”

“Too bad your sister couldn’t get anything out of Jolanda.”

Scout eyed the growing wall of heavy clouds. The temperature was dropping rapidly as a cold wind pushed ahead of the storm, clearing out a path with the promise of snow in the air. “We better find them quick or there won’t be any tracks to follow.”

“Let’s go already!” Mark yelled, leaning through the window and pounding his hand on the door of the SUV. “We’re wasting time here!”

Scout shrugged at Hunter, who frowned and revved up his bike. They each took a tread of the trail and followed it away from the empty farmhouse.

The trail was easy to spot where it mashed down the high prairie grass, continuing south for several miles. They arrived at an old, forgotten highway with a white and black sign marked US 36. Potholes and cracks covered the gray asphalt in both directions. The trail turned west, running parallel to the highway.

Scout didn’t hesitate. He turned with his groove and headed west.

Hunter pulled up beside him and hollered over the noise of their engines. “We followed this highway before, remember?”

“Yeah, but that was a while ago.”

“Remember how it goes through a town every ten miles or so? Lots of good places for another ambush.”

“Then we’ll have to play it safe and stay sharp when we pass through them, but I doubt they’re stopping for anything. They got to figure we’re coming after them.”

The hidden sun left Scout without any clues to the time of day. The miles passed quickly with the flat ground providing a smooth ride next to the broken road.

Roads were reminders of the ruined world that no longer functioned. People, or rather the surviving kids, didn’t function the same way either because they were also broken, cracked and filled with holes. Molly was the leading example, but Scout knew a lot of kids suffered. You either dealt with it or you exploded from the pressure building up over time. Molly had popped her top like a Roman candle.