Spare Parts - Aaron Deck - E-Book

Spare Parts E-Book

Aaron Deck

0,0
5,49 €

-100%
Sammeln Sie Punkte in unserem Gutscheinprogramm und kaufen Sie E-Books und Hörbücher mit bis zu 100% Rabatt.
Mehr erfahren.
Beschreibung

Old, outdated, and falling apart, St. Agnes Hospital's management is looking to upgrade locations. But the upcoming move provides an opportunity for things to slip between the cracks, and someone, or something, is taking advantage of the chaos.


Simon is working as a porter at the hospital when an anonymous doctor approaches him with the opportunity to make more money. But as the requests weigh on his conscience and the payoffs stop balancing out the questions, he's left wondering what he's gotten himself into.


Alessia is a physiotherapist trying to build a life of her own in spite of her past mistakes and overbearing parents. As the move looms closer, she notices strange and concerning irregularities in the wards, putting a target on her back. 


Both are caught in a web, but neither knows who or what is preying on the hospital -- or how they can avoid becoming the next victims.

Sie lesen das E-Book in den Legimi-Apps auf:

Android
iOS
von Legimi
zertifizierten E-Readern

Seitenzahl: 475

Bewertungen
0,0
0
0
0
0
0
Mehr Informationen
Mehr Informationen
Legimi prüft nicht, ob Rezensionen von Nutzern stammen, die den betreffenden Titel tatsächlich gekauft oder gelesen/gehört haben. Wir entfernen aber gefälschte Rezensionen.


Ähnliche


Spare

Parts

Book One

This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2022 by Aaron Deck

All rights reserved.

Aaron Deck asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.

No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, or otherwise without written permission from the publisher, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. It is illegal to copy this book, post it to a website, or distribute it by any other means without permission.

Cover art by David Hoult

Cover layout by Erin Fong

Book design & layout by Erin Fong

Editing by Randi Beers

First published by TRR Publishing House 2022

First edition, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-7778505-0-0

aarondeck.com

Contents

Contents

Acknowledgement

Part One: The Doctor

Part Two: The Hospital

Part Three: The Nurse

Afterword

About the Author

Also by Aaron Deck

Acknowledgement

This book took a lot of time and effort, but it wasn’t all mine.

I would like to thank both Erin Fagen and Alexi Surrette for their medical knowledge that helped me keep things on the realistic side.

I would like to thank David Brown who’s feedback was invaluable as a beta reader.

A massive thank you to Randi Beers for her phenomenal editing job, even if I still hate you for making me cut out a character almost entirely! A thank you to her husband, Danny Campbell, for offering advice and answering my calls at odd times.

Thanks to David Hoult for doing an amazing job on the cover art.

And of course, the biggest thank you goes to my wife, who put up with my shit, gave a lot of advice that I didn’t always immediately follow (much to my own detriment), and for all the support she’s given me over the course of the five years it took to complete this project.

Part One:The Doctor

Simon

News article from the Montreal Independent, April 2nd, 2016

Hospital Head Hangs Up Hat Amid Corruption Concerns

The RCMP launches second probe into bribery allegations

By Vivian Gregs

At a press conference today, Dr. Gregory Ouellette resigned as chairman of the St. Agnes hospital. This comes amid a probe by the RCMP into an ongoing investigation of kickbacks and pay-for-play schemes in the construction of the city’s new super hospital. The probe, launched by the provincial watchdog group against corruption, alleges that Dr. Ouellette took payoffs from multiple contractors to run interference on the provincial government so problems could be manufactured, ensuring the contractors in question could bill up to twice their usual fee.

Dr. Ouellette was hired 8 years ago by the province to spearhead the move of five hospitals into one, super hospital. Since then, the proposed five-hundred million dollar budget has ballooned to over a billion. Watchdog groups took an interest and pestered the RCMP until it opened their original probe. Since then, the problems for Dr. Ouellette snowballed until he tendered his resignation…

***

The old woman cackled wildly and lifted her bony wrists as far as the restraints would allow. She felt a feather that wasn’t there tickle her face. She saw her husband Robbie, dead for the past two years, looming above her.

“Don’t Robbie,” she said, puckering her lips and attempting to blow some wispy hair off her forehead.

These were the patients Simon hated the most. It wasn’t because they were nuts, that he could deal with. Low murmurs or inane chatter were one thing, but he hated when the patients were loud. He couldn’t deal with loud. He also couldn’t deal with the looks people shot his way; the silent sorries and sad smirks.

He thanked the nurse who helped him load the patient onto the stretcher. She gave him one of those looks and walked away. Simon tilted his head to watch her go. After a good look, he pushed the patient down the quiet, dim hallway toward the elevators. They rode the elevator down two stories with the old woman’s voice rebounded around the steel box the whole time. He hoped no one was waiting when the doors opened.

No one was.

He pushed the stretcher through the eighth floor of the medical wing with the old woman yammering the whole way. She was answered more than once from the other geriatric patients that populated it; nonsense speaks to nonsense. They traversed the floor and entered a glass-enclosed connecting bridge. He hit the stainless steel button on his right and the doors opened onto the surgical wing. Right away, even in the dim moonlight, he noted how much cleaner the surgical side was. Where the medical side was dull and leaking grey, here the floors shone with a high buff, reflecting whatever light penetrated the glass. He thought of these things absently. Mostly, his mind was on what The Doctor wanted. It wasn’t the first time these thoughts had surfaced, but they were always, and easily, chased away by the same image; a stubby brown envelope containing a thousand bucks. It was not in Simon’s nature to dwell on things. Also, he’d rationalized that what The Doctor was doing couldn’t be too bad. The patients always came back okay. Always prompt. Always with the proper paperwork. It was no skin off his teeth. He had only to schedule his breaks around these little jaunts. A small price for almost two weeks worth of pay. Still, a certain little thing would gnaw at him if he gave it a chance. Why did The Doctor always choose the ones too far gone? The Doctor didn’t cure them. Some died, but most lingered long after their visits, eventually getting transferred to long-term private care facilities. No one suspected anything about what he or The Doctor were doing.

Still, it was always the old and the far gone.

They exited the surgical wing and walked their way up to the tunnel that led them to The Women’s Pavilion, the old woman laughing maniacally for most of the trip. They encountered no one as they turned into another series of connecting hallways. Simon sighed in relief.

The entrance to the Women’s Pavilion was a steep decline for a hundred meters. When they’d left the surgical wing, they’d been on the eighth floor. Because the Women’s Pavilion was built higher up on the mountain, they were going to be entering it on the third floor. Simon had to use his whole body weight to keep the stretcher from careening down and crashing into the walls, something he’d thought about letting happen on multiple occasions to annoying patients.

At the bottom of the decline, Simon swung the stretcher into a short hallway on his left. It was long enough to hide the stretcher briefly, if only barely. Digging into his pockets, Simon produced a key and unlocked the set of shabby blue doors with a newish-looking lock. The doors opened onto a long, bleak tunnel bending to the right, far away. He pulled the stretcher in and slipped the doors closed. He waited in the blackness until his eyes adjusted to the sliver of light coming from the bottom of the doors. Then, he reached out and flicked on the lamp that rested on the table near him. The sudden light shot spots into his sight. He shut them and rubbed, opening them slowly. His sight centered on a stale wooden table. On it, along with the lamp, lay his stubby, brown envelope and a slip of paper.

The paper held the pick-up time. He was to return in an hour.

Placing both items in his pockets, he slipped back out into the Women’s Pavilion hallway, locking the door behind him. He could hear the old woman making noise on the other side of the door and thought The Doctor had better hurry and shut her up if he didn’t want to be found out. No sooner had he completed this thought then the old woman fell silent. Simon briefly pondered opening the door and finally getting a look at who The Doctor was. It was the weight of the envelope in his back pocket that convinced him otherwise. Instead, he listened to the stillness of the pavilion around him before returning the way he’d come. On his way back up, he checked his SpectraLink. He had no service.

When he reached the top, he turned right and headed towards the transplant ward. Being the highest pavilion on the mountain, he knew he’d get the best reception. He made his call, got back on the clock, and was given a job. He backtracked to the Surgical Pavilion and took the elevators down to the fourth floor.

Simon walked into the Emergency Department and began speaking to the first nurse he saw. She was short, had a large ass, and was currently too busy to be hit on.

“I’m too busy to find where your patient is,” Lindsay told him after lending him her ear for a polite thirty seconds.

“His name is Collins. Barry or Bernie. ‘B’ something.”

“Not mine. Check the board.” She sat down, flicked open a file, and began writing. Simon watched her for a brief moment, debated continuing his flirtation, then wandered away toward the center unit.

He found the patient’s name. He chatted up a P.A.B., a beneficiary attendant who wiped the patient's asses, changed their linen, and did all the unwanted jobs that didn’t fall under anyone elses prerogative. The P.A.B. helped him transfer a Mr. Brandon Collins to a wheelchair. Simon rolled the patient up to the short stay unit on the ninth floor of the surgical wing. He helped place the patient into a bed that he knew had been occupied by a dead man mere hours ago, silently thankful that The Doctor hadn’t asked for the body, especially knowing that the body wouldn’t be coming back.

He greased the next fifteen minutes by sitting in a chair outside the surgical elevators on the eighth floor. This late at night, there was little foot traffic for him to peruse. Simon called his dispatcher and closed out the job. He asked if anything was coming up.

“Nothing scheduled, but that doesn’t mean there ain’t any jobs coming up.”

“I know,” Simon replied and ended the call.

He waited for another twenty minutes, got up, and shuffled back to the Women’s Pavilion. He produced the same key and unlocked the same double blue doors. Stepping inside, he grabbed the finished paperwork off the table and inserted it into the patient’s chart. Then, he pushed the same crazy old lady through the doors and set her into the alcove while he locked up. That done, he waited and listened. He heard the sound of approaching footsteps. Simon pulled out his cellphone and began a hushed argument with a pretend girlfriend, telling her he hated how clingy she’d become. The footsteps approached and passed by without a single glance in his direction. Once the echoes faded away, he began his final journey of the night back up that hallway.

When he reached the top, he saw a portly man pushing an empty cart save for one lone box. It was dull grey plastic with a sharp yellow biohazard logo emblazoned on the side. It struck him as odd that someone would be doing such a run during the waning hours of the night. The housekeeper, because biomedical waste collection fell under their umbrella, gave him a quiet, sharp nod as he passed. It sent a small shiver up Simon’s spine. He watched the housekeeper descend the incline he’d just come up and knew where he was headed; it was the only feasible option open in his mind. Without looking back to verify, Simon continued on with his patient.

Simon’s patient howled constantly on the way back up to her room. He glanced down at her once, wanting to tell her to shut the fuck up. The words dried up in his mouth when he noticed a small incision along her collarbone. It was weeping blood, and he was disgusted by both the sight of it and himself. He grabbed a sani-wipe off one of the wall containers and unceremoniously cleaned the runner of blood that had escaped her tightly sewn wound. Then, he pulled her johnny gown up and tightened it so no one else would see.

After returning the patient to her quarters, he made his way up to the locker room, accepting a job from dispatch along the way. He stood in front of his locker and counted to five. Hearing no one, he opened it and removed the envelope from his back pocket and brought it to his nose; he couldn’t resist a taste. He tucked the envelope into the interior pocket of his coat and reluctantly closed his locker, triple checking the lock.

He wandered into the bathroom and checked himself out in the mirror.

A semi-handsome face looked back at him. Both the top of his skull and his jawline sported the same three-day stubble, the first bits of grey beginning to show through. A night shift always made him lapse into his scruffy look; there were fewer people to impress, after all. His work shirt, a Polo short sleeve, was a crisp white brightly contrasted against his black skin. His black work pants were well ironed. Now, even after four hours of his shift completed, the creases could still cut cardboard. His shoes matched his shirt, for he who accessorized properly was king. Only, looking down now, he noticed something amiss. Above the sole on his heel was a tiny splash of red. A drop of blood. He reached down with a bare hand, then thought better of it.

Scouring the locker room, he found a container of bleach wipes. Neglecting to put on gloves first, he pulled one out and vigorously rubbed his shoe clean with it. Try as he might, he couldn’t remember anyone visibly bleeding on him. It pissed him off slightly.

This place would be great if it wasn’t for all the fucking patients, he reasoned with himself. He chuckled inwardly and dropped the crumpled wipe onto the floor before walking out, in search of his next patient.

Todd

Todd was devouring a muffin with his feet up on his desk. Crumbs drifted down onto his overindulged midsection. There was a knock at the door, startling him enough to make him cough flecks of semi-chewed muffin into the air. He looked from his computer screen, littered with emails, to the door.

“Come in.”

The door opened, and his new employee walked in. Average height. A little on the skinny side. A face that would get lost in a crowd. Nothing remarkable about the kid stood out, except for the fact that he looked extremely young, and he wasn’t Italian. His bland features suggested to Todd that the kid was English, or somewhere from the United Kingdom. Todd just hoped the kid wasn’t Scottish. He hated dealing with that accent; granted, he’d only had one Fucking New Guy over the past three years that’d been Scottish. If Willie was any yard-stick marker, it would prove to be a challenge.

He gestured to the two worn out chairs pushed against the wall, his own groaning in protest with each movement he made. He swung his feet off the desk and stood up, brushing himself off as he did so. He extended his hand and shook the newbie’s, gesturing once again to the chairs.

“I’m Todd. You must be Giles.” It was a statement.

“Yes, sir.”

“Ever have a job before Giles?”

Todd saw a brief look of confusion flash across the kid’s face before it became impassive again. “Yes, sir. I worked for my Uncle’s cleaning company for almost three years.”

“Why’d you leave?” Todd asked, sitting back down.

“I’ll make more money here,” the kid said with a shrug.

Todd popped the rest of the muffin into his mouth, licked his fingers, then grabbed the kid’s uniform that was sitting atop his desk, near where his feet had been. It was peppered with pebbles of dirt that fell to the floor when he handed it to the kid.

“Go get changed, then come back to see me.”

The kid nodded and left. Todd opened the bottom drawer of his desk, selected a donut, and it disappeared in two bites. He turned back to his computer, pulled up the kid’s file, and was baffled that the kid was over twenty. He shrugged. Everyone looked young to him these days. He was on the wrong side of forty and felt even older. He closed the kid’s file and went back to dispassionately reading his emails while he waited for the kid’s return.

They went up to the seventh floor of the surgical wing together. It was long term care and therefore an easy way to introduce the kid into the system. He saw Marky at once; the tall, lanky Filipino was easy to spot. He was always hanging around the nurse’s station, flapping his gums. Todd felt a pang of remorse at leaving the kid in Marky’s care knowing the kid would do the majority of the work.

Some things just couldn’t be helped.

“Marky, this is your trainee,” Todd said as he shuffled up to the desk.

“Day one or two?” Marky asked.

“One.”

“Okay. Thanks. I got it.”

“I’m sure you do,” Todd said, before turning on the well-worn heels of his cheap shoes and walking away.

The Doctor

The framed picture he held in his hands, taken during a particularly hot summer, was of his daughter and him. Her hands were proudly displaying a snake she’d found slithering around in their garden, while her smile showcased two missing teeth.

A raucous roar of laughter drifted up through the vents of his study. His wife was having her monthly book-club meeting in their den. This month it was some pulpy vampire novel that Yvonne, his wife’s best friend, had chosen. While he thought the novels they read were of the worst variety, he was happy that their monthly meetings brought a joy to his wife that he rarely did, even after fifteen years.

Plucking a cloth off his desk, The Doctor rubbed the glass until the finger smudges were erased. Replacing the picture, he sighed, and lifted his pen jar where a key was taped to the underside. He pulled it free and bent down, inserting it into the lock. He opened the drawer and pulled out a stack of papers. The top few were blank. He put those aside and laid the stack upon his desk. On them were the notes of his private work, stacked in chronological order with the most recent being on top. He reviewed the procedure he’d done on the latest patient Simon had brought him. Her blood work was good, better than good, actually. Along with advanced Alzheimers, she suffered from Hepatitis C. Looking at the recent tests he’d had done on the sample showed it was Hep C free. His concoction was a success. Of course, one sample did not mean that it was a sure thing, he’d have to run other tests on more blood samples, but it was a massive step in the right direction; it looked like the work he’d done on Stanley was still paying dividends, many years down the road. Granted, it wasn’t the exact strain, but the base was comparable.

The Doctor reached back into the desk and produced a leather, zip-up pencil case. Inside where a multitude of blood and tissue samples. He selected the one matching the paperwork in front of him and looked at it. Something was off. He held it up to the lamp light stationed on his desk and squinted behind a set of thin framed, round glasses. He tilted the vial to a forty-five degree angle and watched the blood slide down the interior of the glass with viscous determination.

“This is not good,” he said to himself. More testing would be required, but it didn’t look promising. All his previous good feelings evaporated and he sighed. He picked up his wine glass and swirled it, watching as the legs spread with the same slow speed as the blood. An idea was forming in the back of his mind. He put his wine down and jotted “Marangoni Effect???” at the bottom of the sheet of paper.

He went over his research for the next couple hours. He formulated theories, jotting some down, and circled the most promising ones. It was thin, but it was a start. This was how his research always went. He’d make a few advances but have to backtrack to fix whatever problems arose from his tampering with the human genome. He was getting close, though. A few more hurdles and he felt confident his life’s work would come to fruition.

When he felt his brain hitting its brick wall, he packed everything away, ensuring to put the handful of blank pages on top, and then locked up. That done, he sat back and raised his near empty wine glass to the picture.

“Soon,” he said with a humourless smile.

Alessia

“Do you want to rest?”

“Yes. But I should push a little further, no?”

“If you feel able to, sure. But I don't want you overexerting yourself.”

“If I can live with these staples in my chest, and to not pull them out in itching madness, then I can push myself a little further.”

Alessia smiled at her client. They were halfway down the hallway of the Cardiac Surgery wing. All heart patients inevitably ended up there and were separated into two silent categories by the staff; those who wanted to go home, and those who didn’t. Because they were the only ward with that specialty and turn-around needed to be quick, the staff suffered many late shifts and mandatory meetings. Alessia smiled because her patient, a Mr. Gary Chenowitz, was determined to get home. He pushed himself towards independence with a grim determination few of her patients showed. She smiled because she believed in hard work and admired Mr. Chenowitz’s tenacity.

She watched his legs as he took a few more steps. On the fifth, she saw the small spasm in his rectus femoris spread to the surrounding muscles. She slid the commode chair up behind him.

“Sit for a bit,” she said, placing a hand gently on the small of his back and guiding him onto the chair. Her student quickly locked the wheels of the chair before gripping Mr. Chenowitz under the armpit, stabilizing the old man’s descent.

She caught John’s eye above Mr. Chenowitz’s head and gave him a quick nod of approval.

“How’d the date go?” John asked while their client sat and caught his breath.

“It was nice.”

“Nice enough for a second date?”

“Sure. But I doubt it’s going anywhere,” she said with a shrug.

“It takes longer than one date to get to know someone.”

“I said it was nice. I didn't say it was interesting.” She saw John’s eyes widen briefly and felt a pang of regret for the tone she’d used.

“If you say so,” John said, abashed.

The two of them shared an uncomfortable silence. Mr. Chenowitz waited for someone to speak. He found the tidbits of staff gossip more interesting than any television show he’d ever sat through. He found that since he was a patient, only a passing character in their life’s story, the staff were less concerned about what they said around him; it also helped that they saw him more as a piece of furniture than a person at times. Because of this, he knew some salacious secrets.

“How’s the condo search going?”

“Not as well as I’d hoped,” Alessia said, reciting the line she’d practiced hundreds of times in her head. “It’s tough.”

To Alessia, ‘tough’ was an understatement. ‘Tough’ was too personal to tell someone like John. No. She’d keep repeating the lie for now. To him. To everyone.

“Tough?” he asked incredulously. “From what I’ve heard, you've got enough money put away to afford anything in this city.”

“It’s not a matter of money,” she said finally. Then, she looked down at Mr. Chenowitz. “Are you ready to continue?”

“Yes, ma’am,” he said, firing off a two finger salute. He stood up, and with the help of the teacher and student, finished his circuit.

An hour later, Alessia found herself at the Emerge Ambulance entrance. She sat down on the raised concrete barrier separating the sidewalk from the wild vegetation that grew on the other side. The bare beginnings of the late spring vines snaked their way up the three-meter tall rock wall. The wall was close enough that she could smell the minerals in the water that continuously leaked down it. Sitting further down the embankment was a psych patient and their escort. The escort looked bored while the patient hoovered a cigarette.

Parked along the curb was an ambulance, its putrid yellow and green shade an annoyance to her eyes. She thought about the look in John’s eye when she’d told him condo shopping was tough. She was a poor liar. Condo shopping had been easy. She took her time, a whole year, and did extensive research into each piece of property. She’d found one on the ground floor of an old bricked triplex. It had been newly renovated inside with deep brown hardwood floors and all new appliances. Best of all, the area was zoned to allow clinics; she would be able to open her own home business. She’d had to have it.

She’d filled out the paperwork and sent an offer. They countered. She countered. They agreed, and she received a copy of the contract. With that piece of paper in hand, she’d returned home and called her parents into their den. By the time they’d arrived, she had the contract on the table, along with a manila folder. She’d practiced the upcoming situation in her head many times, always reminding herself to keep her composure but remain firm. She almost made it.

“What do you mean you bought a house?” her father asked.

“Not a house, Papa. It’s an apartment condo.”

“So you have no property.”

“It has a small yard, but it’s still property. It’s still an investment.”

“Why?” her mother asked.

“Because it’s time.”

“Time for what?” Her mother slipped a hand onto her father’s thigh. He reached down and gave it a reassuring squeeze.

“It’s time for me to grow up,” she said as she opened the folder and spread the documents it contained upon the table. Her father took his hand from atop her mother’s, slipped on his reading glasses, and began examining the papers. Her mother didn't glance down, opting instead to look at Alessia, who shifted uncomfortably a few times while her father mumbled noncommittal sentences. When he finished, he took off his glasses and closed his eyes, pinching the bridge of his nose between his index and thumb as he did so.

“Well?” her mother asked the room.

“I want to start a business for myself,” she said. “I’m going to have a physio room in my condo where I’ll receive patients.”

“But you have a job,” her mother said. ”You have a good job. You’re working with doctors, any of which could be a potential husband.”

She felt her temper creeping up but stifled it. “I’m not going to leave my job right away. Starting my own clinic will take time. Probably years.”

“So you’re going to invite random strangers into your home, then,” her mother said. Her tone was venom wrapped in a quilt of guilt. Alessia’s anger jumped out.

“They will be clients.”

“Strangers. And you’re not married. Who will protect you?”

“Me, Mama. I’ll protect me,” she said, exasperated.

“You’re not married,” her mother repeated.

She watched her mother’s fingers begin twisting her wedding band. Right on cue.At least my hands are steady, she thought smugly as silence settled on the room. It was her father who eventually broke it.

He opened his eyes and leaned toward his daughter, reaching out; she gave him her hand willingly enough. He cupped it with his left while his right patted it several times. Then, he gave it a gentle squeeze.

“We are a family, figlia. This is a major step in your life, but it’s also a major step for us too. We are a family. What we do, we do together. Please, let us all sleep on it for a week or two. Have some discussion on it. You owe us that much, at least.”

Suddenly, she felt ashamed. He was right. They were a family and always included each other in every decision. So, she agreed to sleep on it and discuss it over the next two weeks.

That was five days ago, and no further discussion had occurred. It’s fine, she thought, as the sun traced its way across the ambo’s fender. I gave them time to process my decision. It’ll be easier this way. She felt that the longer they went without saying anything, the better the outcome would be, that they’d come around to her line of thinking. A snap decision would be a hard ‘no,’ she knew. A long, drawn-out conversation between the two would allow them to see everything in her light; that she was over thirty and it was time to start a life of her own, away from the nest.

She checked her watch and was surprised to see that she could sit in the sun a while longer. She noticed small pockets of activity around her. The open bay doors of the laundry complex, across from the ambulance entrance, were emitting a baritone buzz. She saw mammoth sacks of sheets hoisted by chains and pulleys. Close by, on the sidewalk, she listened to a pocket of people, three employees, and two family members, huffing on cigarettes and talking about the terrible loss suffered by the Alouettes. She watched as an ambulance pulled up to a stop behind the one already parked. A man got out of the passenger side. He saw Alessia sitting there, gave her a quick, soft smile while walking to the back of the ambulance. His partner, a tall, muscled woman, popped the back doors open and climbed inside. The man bent over to open the compartment close to the wheel hub. She noted that his tight pants accentuated an already extremely cute butt, if you were into that kind of thing. She watched the partners unload an elderly patient with efficient ease and little talk, a hefty bag slung over the man’s shoulder.

She watched all this and let her mind float free. She thought back to her date the night before. She’d been hot, smoking hot was the actual phrase, and Alessia wouldn’t have minded getting into her pants, but goddamn had she been dull, vapid, and a little bit racist. While Alessia had been known to jump the bones of those she’d found particularly attractive before, age had sullied that. There had to be a mental connection as well as a physical one. And so, she’d politely refused the offer to go up to her date’s apartment, pointedly not noticing the seductive eyes thrown her way. It hadn’t been easy as she did have a body to die for. She mused on the woman’s curves for a bit before checking her watch. She got up, stretched, then headed back inside.

Sheela

Thank fuck she was free until next month! Sheela hated the meetings with her fuckin’ court appointed shrink.

The first year was the worst. Twice a week for the first six months followed by once a week for the remaining six months. Plus a boatload of “voluntary” NA meetings. Now, the shrink meetings were bi-weekly. While she was able to admit to herself that they did help, it was the neurotic little woman she talked to, a Dr. Wosniack, that made her dread the meetings; that chick had to be fuckin’ mental herself if she’s been working at this place for thirty years.

During their meetings, she never approached Sheela. She was always seated behind her desk, some color of file folder in front of her. As the weeks wore into months and then surpassed the year mark, the file folders had darkened in color and bulked in thickness. Sheela felt that The Wahz was always trying to trick her into admitting something she’d never done. After every answer Sheela would give, The Wahz would flip through her file, make a subtle mark next to some sentence, give a perfunctory nod, and then ask Sheela to continue.

Sheela reached the elevator and hit the button. While she waited, she fished around in her pockets for her phone. The elevator chimed and arrived while she was digging in her purse. The doors slid shut, and it descended to another waiting patient, sans Sheela.

Shit, she couldn’t find it. She must have left it in The Wahz’s office. Shit! She turned in the direction of the office and trudged down the hallway. When she got there, some twinge of intuition made her pause, her knuckles poised a few inches away from the door. Instead of knocking, she shifted her weight to the right and peered into the window slit that ran parallel to the door. Inside, she saw The Wahz down on her knees, a container of bleach wipes in her left hand while her right clutched one and was furiously scrubbing away at the chair Sheela had been sitting in. When the chair was clean, Sheela watched The Wahz crumple up the wipe and throw it away. Sheela watched The Wahz’s mouth go slack, unhinged, as it opened to enormous proportions, before she jammed her whole hand into her mouth to the wrist.

What in the fuck is that?

Sheela stepped back from the window and shivered. She searched her pockets and purse again, hoping beyond hope to find her phone. She had no such luck. Finally, with a slight tremble in her hand, she knocked and waited.

After an unbearably long time, she heard The Wahz shout through the door.

“Who is it?”

Sheela almost didn’t answer. Almost.

“It’s Sheela, Dr. Wosniack. I think I left my phone in your office.”

She could picture The Wahz taking her quick, small steps towards the door. She could even hear the swish of her slippers on the carpet. The door opened, but not fully. The Wahz handed the phone to Sheela and looked at her. Sheela felt herself being judged, sized up, considered for a meal. She shivered again and thought she saw a flickering pull at the corners of The Wahz’s lips.

Was that a smile?

“Thank you,” she said with a small voice.

“Anything else?”

“No.”

“Then please leave. I have another client coming soon.”

Sheela turned and walked toward the elevator. She reached out to hit the button, thought of The Wahz’s jaw again and opted for the stairs; a hasty retreat was always fuckin’ best.

She pushed the heavy, red stairwell door open and stepped in. She clutched the railing and began descending the first flight. There were twelve steep stairs that stopped at a landing, with twelve more descending to the next level. She was halfway to the landing when the door above her closed with a loud snap. It startled Sheela, and her footing slipped; if she hadn’t been holding onto the light pink painted railing, she would have fallen the rest of the way and possibly ended up with a broken ankle or leg. As it was, she kept herself upright at the expense of having her arm overextend itself. She felt first a pull, then a slight burning in her shoulder that she knew would double by day’s end. Still, she considered herself fuckin’ lucky. She descended to the landing and stood there for a few moments, rubbing the sore spot in her right shoulder. She looked at nothing in particular, just shifting her gaze casually over the walls.

Something caught her eye. It was on the outskirts of her peripheral vision. It looked like the wall was moving. She took a tentative step away from where she saw the movement. Then, she scanned the scant stairwell but saw nothing obvious. Nothing moved. Nothing breathed. Nothing stirred. Probably just my adrenaline washing out, she thought.

When Sheela felt she had herself under control, she continued down the stairs. She passed by the second floor and then the first. Twice on her descent, she caught something moving along the walls, just outside her field of vision. Every time she turned in its direction, there was nothing but the pockmarked white brick staring back at her. She continued to the basement level, where an exit door was, except, when she got there, there was no door. She stood, dumbfounded, staring at the same pockmarked white bricks. She saw movement again, only this time it was directly in front of her. The wall rippled and expanded out in the middle by a few inches. It hung there, seemingly reaching out to her before retracting. Sheela closed her eyes and shook her head. It’s just a fuckin’ lingering drug hallucination, she told herself. It wouldn’t wash. With her eyes still closed, she heard a rumbling and felt a faint whisper of hot air push against her face. She squeezed her eyes tighter and told herself, once again, that what she heard and felt wasn’t real. Again, it wouldn’t wash. Struggling, she counted to twenty and opened her eyes; a trick she’d learned in her meetings.

She looked out at what was once a stationary brick wall. Now, the middle of it was bulging out like a fuckin’ pregnant chick ready to pop. She watched in horror as it reverted back to being a wall before expanding again with hypnotic movements. This time, however, it didn’t stop. When the majority of the wall had reached the limits of its ballooning, the center kept going. It pushed out in a puff of crumbling dust. The center began to form a limb, stretching out. It stalked toward her at an agonizingly slow speed, yet she was rooted to the ground, unable to comprehend, or believe, what was unfolding before her. It was only when a finger and a thumb materialized at the end of the appendage and plucked a piece of her blouse neatly between them that panic overrode her brain. She turned, wrenching free of the fingers as they ripped a soft square of fabric from her blouse, and bolted up the stairs. She reached the first landing and looked toward the door that held her salvation, except that door had disappeared too. She stood dumbstruck, not believing what her eyes told her to be true. She heard the same sounds as before and looked behind her. The wall on the landing was ballooning out. She had no doubt that another hand would be snatching at her soon. Her brain sent a signal to her legs to run, to GET THE FUCKIN’ FUCK OUTTA THERE!

Sheela sprinted up the stairs and saw flickers of movement. When she reached the second-floor landing, she felt something brush against her, struggling for a tentative hold on her clothes. She heard groans of displeasure as she skirted free of everything.

Reaching the top floor, Sheela let out a gasp of defeat. Through the sweat streaked hair plastered to her face, she saw that where a door should be, none was. It was the same pockmarked brick that had greeted her throughout the stairwell. She cried out and slammed her hands against the wall. She felt immediate pain radiating from her shoulder, followed by a more familiar burn of the skin being sheared away on her palms. She pounded until her hands began to go numb. She stopped as the wall began it's all too familiar outward bulge. She cried out with the force of a trapped animal accepting its fate but vowing to fight til death.

Only, she saw that it wasn’t the wall bulging out, but rather a door being swung open. Silhouetted amid the door frame was The Wahz.

“What on earth are you doing?” The Wahz asked.

Sheela couldn’t answer in words. She collapsed into The Wahz’s arms, crying.

Todd

“Ahh, man. Come on. It’s Friday. Besides, it’s not even fifteen minutes past break time.”

“That sounds like an awful lot of excuses,” Todd told Rico. “What I’m not hearing is any remorse.”

“What do you want me to say? Sorry I had to take a shit?”

“Don’t play dumb. I saw you jawing at the bullshit table when I went by,” Todd checked his watch for posterity, “eleven minutes ago, now.”

Rico screwed up his face. “Okay, so what, I greased my break a bit. Why are you up here banging me on that? There was a couple rooks down there too.”

“I’m banging you because you should know better. You should be setting a better example to the new guys. That’s what seniority is all about, no?”

Todd saw the defiance and anger in Rico. It was plainly written across his face.

“Hussein would never do this.”

“Maybe. Maybe not. But I’m docking you the fifteen minutes either way.”

Todd waited for Rico to say something. To get in his face. It would do wonders for his mood to bust Rico down another peg. Who knows, if Rico really pushed it, he could skip the verbal and go straight to a written warning.

“Fine,” Rico said, stepping past Todd toward his cart parked at the end of the hall.

Todd watched him walk away. When he was sure Rico wouldn’t say anything else, he left, taking the elevator from the tenth floor of the surgical wing to the fourth. His mood was sour because he hated working the evening shift. Hussein didn’t run a tight ship and every time he tried to enforce the rules, he could feel the disdain for him dripping off the employees. Who in their right mind would choose to work until almost midnight everyday anyway? A bunch of freaks and social pariahs, Todd thought. What’s more, he was doing this as a favour for Hussein, a rather large favour now that he’d gotten lip from a lot of the employees. He was going to give the business to Hussein next time they spoke.

The elevator chimed and Todd stepped out and turned toward the Emergency Department. He’d put Giles there this evening and had left the kid alone. He seemed like a good worker, and since Todd hadn’t gotten a call from Bobbi, the head nurse, he assumed everything was good. Still, he wanted to show his face to ensure that they knew he was a caring and proactive supervisor.

He punched in the code, the double doors swung open, and Todd stepped into Emerge.

Minor care, designated for the walking wounded, was one large square with nine rooms along its exterior walls. Seven designated places along the walls throughout the hallway had stretchers placed in them, with patients occupying each. The scant cubby holes scattered about, cramped spaces with little desk space due to the overflow of medical journals and computers from the early 2000s, were for the doctors. In the middle of Minor Care was a room used to store all their equipment and bedding. Todd did the tour and took a mental note that all the garbages were empty. A checkmark for Giles.

He passed by a dimly lit corridor encased in glass on his left. From inside, Todd heard someone yelling about ants on the walls. Off to his right was the one room triage area. It too was encased in glass; a set of double sliding glass doors bookended each side. One set led into the waiting room, and the other set led to where he was standing. Inside the triage area a nurse and two paramedics were assessing a restrained patient on a stretcher. Todd saw that the patient used all the slack the restraints allowed to continuously scratch at his right leg. His head was constantly moving side to side, like he was stuck perpetually answering ‘no’ to any and all questions.

He suppressed a shiver and continued into the epicenter. Acute Care. There was a large wooden counter surrounding the area where nurses and doctors congregated to do research, or relax. Above eye level, many monitors shone down with the vitals for each patient.

Continuing deeper into the bowels of Emerge, he passed the three resuscitation rooms. All three doors were closed.

Around a bend and Todd ended up at the far end of Emerge. It was a dark, closed off space with ten beds. Half were in rooms with three walls and a curtain drawn across the opening. The other half, the back half, were sealed by sliding glass doors. These rooms were reserved for the dangerous isolations like tuberculosis or measles. The smell of sickness and despair hung heavy, a tangible thing.

Giles was in none of the areas so Todd backtracked, listening as he passed the three closed resus rooms. He heard movement in Resus 1. He dipped around the corner and entered it through the utility room. Giles wasn’t there. The only thing there was a corpse in a zipped up body bag. This time, Todd let his shiver show. He hated being around dead people. He was about to turn away when a flicker of movement caught his eye.

Because the operating-room-like lights were on, he twisted his head in time to see the silhouettes of fingers tracing their way down the interior of the bag.

Todd tried to scream, but it caught in his throat. He waited, frozen for several seconds, for some other noise to punctuate the room, for some additional movement to capture his vision. He`d about given up hope, with palpable relief, when he saw those silhouetted fingers reach up and poke through the head of the zipper. Todd saw the index, middle, ring and pinky push through, one by one. They were all black. As black as the blindness coming, tunneling his vision, wanting to pull him down to its oblivion, if he wished to stay around and see.

He did not and beat a hasty retreat, exiting into the main hallway. He spied Giles coming out of the security office with his cart and waved to him with a hand that was steadier than he felt.

By the time Todd had reached the office, he thought that Hussein owed him a damn big favour.

The Body

The halls of the Emergency Department were quiet. Most patients, and some of the staff, were sleeping; even sickness takes breaks at midnight. The unit coordinator, head nurse, and a P.A.B., all sat behind the central desk. They were waiting for the Porters to come and collect the body for the morgue. The man, now just a body, had been trouble. He died, was resuscitated, died again, was resuscitated again, and was almost stabilized before he crashed a final time. The wife had watched from the hallway as the staff tried to bring the man around for the third time; she’d been escorted away by security when she cried out, ran into the room, and grasped her husband's leg. During and after her removal, the staff continued their fruitless labour.

An hour after she’d called, Bobbi, the head nurse, looked up from her paperwork as the two Porters approached the desk. One was a tall, handsome black man she knew by sight, but couldn’t remember his name, Mario or Melvin or something. She flashed him a quick smile that withered when she saw Dennis standing next to him. He smiled down at her, his stained upper teeth making a brief appearance.

“Hi, Bobbi. What room’s the goner in?” Dennis asked.

“Resus one.”

“Okay. Lead the way.”

Bobbi pulled the manila folder from under her notes and stood up. She handed the folder to Dennis and suppressed a shudder when their hands briefly touched.

The Porters followed her down the hall, pushing the morgue truck ahead of them. It was a stretcher with a metal casing surrounding the mattress. Wrapped around the metal was a black canvas tarp draped over it to shield the visitors from the bodies. The P.A.B. slipped off the cover while Bobbi depressed the switch and dropped the metal casings. The Porters grabbed hold of the body and hoisted it over to the cart.

“Motherfucker’s heavy,” Dennis complained.

“Nah. It’s cause he’s dead weight,” his partner said, a tired tone in his voice. “He’s one fifty at most. Quit your bitching and lift.”

“He weighed one forty-two at time of death, so you were close,” Bobbi said. The handsome Porter shot her a smile as he deposited his end of the body with ease; Dennis was breathing deeply while beads of sweat popped out on his forehead.

Bobbi closed the metal struts and pushed the pin through, locking it in place. The P.A.B. and Porters stretched the canvas out and put it back on. Then, the Porters thanked the ER staff and wheeled the cart out of the Emergency Department and towards the elevators.

“There are so many things I’d do to her,” Dennis said, scratching his crotch thoughtfully, Mario’s scowl going unnoticed.

“Like she’d go for your fat ass.”

“I’ve got something fat for her to have.”

“Fat and disgusting, more like.”

“Keep running your mouth, Somalia, and you’ll get some too.”

The elevator bell chimed as Mario raised an eyebrow, quizzically. “And you accuse me of being gay,” he said without much humour. It was the same tired old routine between them.

“Hey, now. I know you’d like it. No shame in that. I’m just doing my duty. Spreading my love.”

“That ain’t the only thing you’re spreading you skeezy bastard.”

The elevator took them down to the third floor. The doors opened and Dennis exited first. He didn't notice the nurse holding a tray of four coffees; Mario almost hitting her with the stretcher when he pushed it out. She jumped back, spilling hot coffee across her hand.

“Shit. I'm sorry,” Mario said before shooting Dennis a look.

“No one was hurt,” Dennis said with a shrug. He missed the dirty look the nurse gave him as the doors closed. “Besides, it’s a night-shift. Calm down, Somalia.”

They made quite the pair, side by side. One was pale, bloated, and with a face boasting burst capillaries. The other was tall and toned with a midnight complexion.

“I'm not from Somalia, you inbred hick,” Mario continued, his tired tone still intact. He mentally cursed Inshan, that Trini prick of a security guard, for shouldering him with the nickname. In truth, he was a third generation Canadian, and no one in his family knew their exact ancestry; they’d been spread across all of Africa, so Somalia was as good a guess as any. It didn’t matter. The nickname still sucked.

They pushed the stretcher across the concrete bridge that connected the main pavilions of St. Agnes to the neurological wing; the bridge was situated high across an access road. Technically, it was just another wing of St. Agnes, but its separate civic address gave it some perks. It ran its own staff and budget, while still being provided money from the overall hospital network.

The two Porters were heading there because the Neuro held the final stop for some patients; the up-to-date-once-upon-a-time morgue. The old St. Agnes morgue had been cleared of its previous residents and converted into basement style offices. It would be forever encased in aging brick, forever dank, forever moist, and forever windowless.

After crossing the bridge, they turned right and took the elevator down to the basement. They exited into a long grey hallway stretching away to both the left and right. To the right was the ambulance entrance, along with a bench that would no doubt be currently occupied by Xavier, their resident homeless man. The pair turned left and walked ten paces before coming to the morgue door. They pressed the buzzer and waited.

A squat man in forest green scrubs and a papery mask hanging off one ear opened the door. When he spoke, his voice was low and his words crinkled.

“Ahhh. My new dance partner. Please, bring him this way, gentlemen.”

The two porters followed him into a room, squinting against the reflective light; the aide seemed to neither notice, nor care, about the gleam. They continued beyond a set of stainless steel industrial doors. Inside the little room, the light was muffled. They positioned the stretcher by the outstretched cooling board, unzipped, unlocked and unloaded.

“Thanks ‘gents,” the morgue attendant said, already turning his back on them and beginning the preliminary examination of the body.

Mario zipped up the canvas and relocked the cage. Dennis left through the metal doors, pawing at his pocket for his cigarettes. Mario pushed the stretcher back into the hallway and then cleaned it. That done, he brought it back to St. Agnes and found a quiet corner to stash it in.

Neither he, Dennis, nor the morgue attendant saw any movement from within the body bag.

What would they have noticed?

Corpses don't move.

Simon

1

They were sitting on bar stools. Her legs were slightly open, which he took as an inviting sign. He inched closer to her and then took a swig of his second Red Stripe. She was drunk and rambling about how she’d done terribly on her finals, and about which classes sucked. Freshmen tended to annoy Simon. Their talk was boring, and he often spent too much on their tab.

“So, like, my stupid prof calls me up in front of the class.” She stopped and blew a burp out of the side of her mouth. “She says, like, if I don’t stop talking she’ll kick me out. Like, hello,” she said, throwing her arms wide. Simon watched the beer slop over the rim of her glass. He watched it splash down across the floor, narrowly missing his shoes. “You’re not teaching me anything important,” she continued. “It’s two days before finals. I’m not learning anything important now. My high school chemistry always told me, ‘anything you read at three in the morning will not be on the test. Just sleep, and it’ll be better.’” She burped again. “Or something like that.”

Simon inhaled a waft of french fries and garlic as he leaned forward. Her thighs pressed inward before opening again, brushing his knee. The hand not cradling his beer dropped down and rested on her thigh. He smiled into her eyes.

“It’s terrible when profs are hard asses,” he said. “I had one this year that rode my ass. Bitches, all of ‘em!” He finished, widened his smile until he felt like it would drip off him. She smiled back and put a hand over his, giving it a squeeze.

Simon ordered two shots, one of vodka and one of water, with a third taxed on for the bartender. The shot glasses clinked together and liquid was downed, Simon faking a grimace from his shot of water.

They talked for another half an hour and then left the bar together. He drove them to her place and took her keys to unlock the front door before she snatched them back, telling him she could do it. She used the wall as support while moving towards the elevator. When the elevator arrived, she kissed him and called him David. At her door, amid a gale laughter, the keys were fumbled in the lock and dropped a few times until she eventually got the door open. She pulled him inside.

2

Simon drove into the furthest reaches of the parking lot. He found a space that was underneath an overhanging elm that cast leaves and a shadow during noon; in the early morning hours, the space was encased in darkness. He was three hours early for his shift. He parked his car and slept. His dreams, like the night sky, were black.