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Subject: {ASSM} New TG: The Lab - Ch. Two 1/2
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"The Lab" by Rebecca A.
(TG)
This is the second chapter of a story I will produce a new chapter of
(hopefully) every two weeks or so. It contains some fairly mild sex,
but if you're under 18 etc... it's not for you. Those of you looking for
hot sex will probably be disappointed, since it is petty tame stuff.
Feel free to archive or otherwise distribute, provided it is unedited and
no fee is charged
for access. This story may not be distributed from any site that charges
money, is
members-only, or uses that ridiculous "adult check" thing (or any similar
system).
All rights reserved by the author, who can be contacted at
cyan@anon.nymserver.com
I hope you enjoy it. Please let me know.
Becky
***
Chapter Two.
At about 4.00 am I woke, in agony. It felt like my joints were on fire.
My mouth was
dry, and my head was pounding. At first I wasn't sure what to do. I
didn't want to wake
Catherine. But a spasm of pain swept through me and I groaned, and she
was instantly
awake. "What's wrong?" she asked. I tried to explain as best I could, and
she was
immediately in professional mode, taking my pulse and my temperature and
inspecting
me clinically.
"You have a high fever," she said. "I'm going to take you over to the
clinic."
We dressed, although she had to help me, I was shaking as well as having
muscle
spasms. I was terrified. "What's happening to me?" I cried. I tried to
explain to
Catherine that apart from the events of the past month or so I'd barely
had a sick day in
my life. Ever since that accident at Dawe ...
"I know," she said. "I couldn't find any problems then, but I think I
must have missed
something. I'm going to get my friend Bob Esterhaus to look at you."
I was in enormous pain, through fiery stabbing pains in my joints and a
burning feeling
around my face, but Catherine said she'd rather not give me anything if I
could stand the
pain until she'd run a couple of tests. We went out to her car, as I was
sure I couldn't
drive and she didn't want to wrestle with mine again. She had a small red
BMW, which
she drove quickly and efficiently while I moaned in the seat beside her,
convinced my
body was dissolving or something. While she drove she was on the
cellphone to
someone.
We arrived at the clinic she worked at, and were greeted by several
orderlies and a nurse
who placed me on a gurney and wheeled me into a small consulting room. I
was still
moaning, and tossing and turning, unable to get comfortable. Catherine
came into the
room with a guy I took to be a doctor. After a few moments he organized a
shot which
took away all my pain. I reached for Catherine's hand and she held mine
as I slipped
away into unconsciousness.
I drifted in and out of awareness several times, each time seeing figures
beside the bed
but only vaguely, before I awoke completely in the light of day. The sun
was trying to
poke through the drawn blinds, and I could see it was a sunny day
outside. As I twisted
in bed I noticed that, although I thought I still had a buzz from the
drugs, the pain was
mostly gone. I had an IV drip in my arm, and a hospital gown on. There
was no sign of
Catherine.
After I'd been awake about ten minutes a nurse came in, and gave a small
start when she
saw I was awake. She gave me a shot in the hip, scuttled out again, then
returned about
five minutes later with a tall, imposing man who introduced himself as Dr
Esterhaus. He
flicked the fluorescent lights in the room on.
"How are you feeling this morning, Mr. Ealey?"
I had to clear my throat to speak. My voice came out a little hoarse and
raspy. I told him
I felt a lot better, though perhaps that was the drugs.
"Yes, you've been very feverish for a while now. We were quite concerned.
Mr. Ealey
--"
"-- Call me Jim"
"-- Jim, Can you understand me clearly?"
I nodded, and he continued. "Jim, Dr Adams -- Catherine -- was only able
to give us a
few details about you. Your friend Tom Masterson gave us some others, but
I need to
ask you some questions if that's alright." He'd spoken to Tom, too? That
was fast. He
pulled a chair from the side of the room and sat down next to the bed.
The nurse handed
him the charts from the foot of the bed, and went to open the blinds.
He ran through some basic questions. Any allergies to medication that I
knew about? He
asked me to describe the symptoms I'd had recently. "That was all after
the incident at
Dawe Chemical?" he asked. I nodded.
"Well," he went on, "I've looked at your blood work from that accident
and you seemed
fine then. Jim, does your family have any history of medical problems we
should know
about?"
I thought of my Mom and Dad, still healthy as ever back in Detroit. And
my
grandparents, who were still, all four of them, active and healthy. I
told him we weren't
a family that was prone to get sick at all. He then asked me whether I'd
been overseas
recently, perhaps to Africa?
I shook my head. "No. I went to Europe for a while just after I
graduated, but that's the
only travel I've done unless you count Canada a few times."
He settled into his chair and looked at me earnestly. Jim, we'd like to
keep you for
observation for a while. You're certainly not well enough to be
discharged yet anyway.
But we'd like to run some tests to see if we can pin down what this is.
The last few days
have had us a little puzzled. We --"
I interrupted. "The last few days? What do you mean?"
Dr Esterhaus seemed momentarily surprised. "Jim, you've been here for
several days
now. Today is Thursday"
"I came in on Monday morning."
"Yes," he said gently. "You've been somewhat delirious for most of that
time. This is
the first opportunity we've had to ask you these questions."
I lay back in bed and tried to think. The last thing I remembered
properly was being in
the passenger seat of Catherine's car, in agony.
"Jim, we'd like to run some more tests if that's okay with you."
"What kind?"
"Blood tests, mostly, though there are a few others. We need to take some
x-rays and
some urine samples." He hesitated, as though searching for words. He
looked grave.
His expression bothered me. "What?" I said impatiently.
"It's not HIV, we know that."
I snorted. "I could have told you that, Doc. I take my responsibilities
seriously, and I'm
always careful. Besides, I haven't exactly been very active over the last
few years."
"Yes. Well, we know it isn't that. Jim, I'll be blunt. We're unsure at
the moment really,
because a lot of things don't fit, but we think perhaps -- and this is
only a perhaps so
you should not be too concerned -- you might have some new form of
leukemia we
haven't seen before. Your leukocyte count -- white blood cells -- is way
up, well over
normal, and we can't find a viral infection so we don't quite know yet
what's causing it.
But if it is a form of leukemia it's not one we've seen before. Your
fever is abnormal,
and points to a viral cause, and the pains you are describing don't quite
fit either. But
we'd like to rule out that possibility before we go any further."
I looked at the ceiling and wished I could lapse back into
unconsciousness.
Over the next few days I was subjected to several tests. Dr Esterhaus
came and asked me
some more questions about the accident at Dawe. Tom called by on the
Friday night, and
we talked for a while. I was pretty light headed from the painkillers and
found it hard to
keep my concentration. Most of the time I slept. partly I think because
of the drugs and
also because I seemed to be very tired again. On the Saturday I woke up
to find
Catherine sitting beside the bed, reading a book. I watched her for a few
moments,
before she looked up to see me looking at her. She smiled. I'd forgotten
how good that
was. "How are you?" she asked.
"My voice was still raspy. "Pretty good, I guess. Whatever these
painkillers are, they're
great."
"Careful," she said jokingly, "We Doctors are good pushers when we want
to be."
"Catherine ... I'm very, very sorry about putting you through all this."
She stood up, and came and stood close to the bed. She ran her hand
through my hair.
"It's okay," she said gently. "You gave me a bit of a fright the other
night, though. I
thought I was thorough when I checked you out at Dawe."
"Dr Esterhaus says you were. He looked at the blood tests you did --
"-- Yes, I passed them on to him when you were unconscious. That's kind
of a breach
of ethics, but I was worried."
Did he tell you what he thought it might be?"
"No," Catherine said. It was the first time I had the feeling she might
not have been
telling me the truth. I changed the subject, and we talked for a while
about some of the
bad daytime television I'd been trying to watch. Catherine stayed until
about nine, sitting
on the bed next to me. We kissed -- I was embarrassed because I hadn't
had the
opportunity to brush my teeth for a while. Eventually she left. I lay
back and thought of
the last time we'd been together. I feel asleep eventually and had some
vivid and
disturbing dreams, the first dreams I'd had since being in hospital. She
was in the
dream, too. But there was someone else, someone who wanted to take
something away
from me, and I didn't know what it was they wanted. I forgot most of it
when I woke in
the middle of the night, but it disturbed me all the same.
By the middle of the next week the pain didn't seem so bad, and they
began to wean me
off the drugs. Dr. Esterhaus came to see me each day, and on the Monday
he was able to
tell me that he'd been able to positively rule out Leukemia and most of
the known blood
diseases. He was sure it wasn't contagious, whatever it was. So if the
pain subsided I
would be able to go home soon.
Catherine came to see me every second day or so. As the pain wore off I
became better
company. She'd come by on the nights she wasn't on call, and we'd watch
TV together,
or just talk about whatever came into our heads. She heard a lot about my
childhood, I
learned a lot more about her life before she met me. She'd done a lot for
someone who
was only in her mid twenties, and had traveled throughout Europe and most
of Asia,
even as far as India. She brought me in some photographs of her in India,
looking like a
hippie when she was 19 and had long hair. She looked cute then, but she'd
improved as
she'd gotten older.
Three weeks after I had been admitted I was allowed to go home. Catherine
came to pick
me up. She took me to Tom's place, at his suggestion, since I was still
pretty weak and
Dr Esterhaus wasn't thrilled about me being on my own a lot. Tom was at
work during
the days, and I knew he had a pretty full social life with the ladies,
but he told me I not to argue, and that he wouldn't have me stay anywhere
else. I had the phone diverted from
my place to his. Catherine promised me she'd come by regularly.
I took over Tom's spare bedroom. I was able to walk around, though I was
still very
weak. My body felt drained. I had been in good physical condition before
I was admitted
--
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