Koontz, Dean R. - Hideaway

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by Hideaway(Lit)


  him. He tended to err on the side of optimism, proceeding with a

  resuscitation that could have more tragic consequences if it succeeded

  than if it failed.

  The other four members of the team understood his weakness, too.

  They watched him expectantly.

  If the operating room had been tomb--still before, it was now as silent

  as the vacuum of any lonely place between the stars where God, if He

  existed, passed judgment on His helpless creations.

  Jonas was acutely aware of the precious seconds ticking past.

  The patient had been in the operating room less than two minutes. But

  two minutes could make all the difference.

  On the table, Harrison was as dead as any man had ever been. His skin

  was an unhealthy shade of gray, lips and fingernails and toenails a

  cyanotic blue, lips slightly parted in an eternal exhalation. His flesh

  was utterly devoid of the tension of life.

  However, aside from the two-inch-long shallow gash on the right side of

  his forehead, an abrasion on his left jaw, and abrasions on the palms of

  his hands, he was apparently uninjured. He had been in excellent

  physical condition for a man of thirty-eight, carrying no more than five

  extra pounds, with straight bones and well-defined musculature.

  No matter what might have happened to his brain cells, he looked like a

  perfect candidate for resuscitation.

  A decade ago, a physician in Jonas's position would have been guided by

  the Five-Minute Limit, which then had been acknowledged as the maximum

  length of time the human brain could go without blood-borne oxygen and

  suffer no diminution of mental faculties. During the past decade,

  however, as resuscitation medicine had become an exciting new field, the

  Five-Minute Limit had been exceeded so often that it was eventually

  disregarded. With new drugs that acted as free-radical scavengers,

  machines that could cool and heat blood, massive doses of epinephrine,

  and other tools, doctors could step well past the Five-Minute Limit and

  snatch some patients back from deeper regions of death. And

  hypothermia-extreme cooling of the brain which blocked the swift and

  ruinous chemical changes in cells following death old extend the length

  of time a patient might lie dead yet be successfully revived. Twenty

  minutes was common. Thirty was not hopeless. Cases of triumphant

  resuscitation at forty and fifty minutes were on record. In 1988, a

  two-year-old girl in Utah, plucked from an icy river, was brought back

  to life without any apparent brain damage after being dead at least

  sixty-six minutes, and only last year a twenty-year-old woman in

  Pennsylvania had been revived with all faculties intact seventy minutes

  after death.

  The other four members of the team were still staring at Jonas.

  Death, he told himself, is just another pathological state.

  Most pathological states could be reversed with treatment.

  Dead was one thing. But cold and dead was another.

  To Gina, he said, "How long's he been dead?"

  Part of Gina's job was to serve as liaison, by radio, with the on-site

  paramedics and make a record of the information most vital to the

  resuscitation team at this moment of decision. She looked at her

  watch-a Rolex on an incongruous pink leather band to match her sock-and

  did not even have to pause to calculate: "Sixty minutes, but they're

  only guessing how long he was dead in the water before they found him.

  Could be longer."

  "Or shorter," Jonas said.

  While Jonas made his decision, Helga rounded the table to Gina's side

  and, together, they began to study the flesh on the cadaver's left arm,

  searching for the major vein, just in case Jonas decided to resuscitate.

  Locating blood vessels in the slack flesh of a corpse was not always

  easy, since applying a rubber tourniquet would not increase systemic

  pressure.

  There was no pressure in the system.

  "Okay, I'm going to call it," Jonas said.

  He looked around at Ken, Kari, Helga, and Gnia, giving them one last

  chance to challenge him. Then he checked his own Timer wristwatch and

  said, "It's nine-twelve P.M Monday night, March fourth. The patient,

  Hatchford Benjamin Harrison, is dead ... but retrievable."

  To their credit, whatever their doubts might have been, no one on the

  team hesitated once the call had been made. They had the right-and the

  duty-to advise Jonas as he was making the decision, but once it was

  made, they put all of their knowledge, skill, and training to work to

  insure that the "retrievable" part of his call proved correct.

  Dear God, Jonas thought, I hope I've done the right thing.

  Already Gina had inserted an exsanguination needle into the vein that

  she and Helga had located. Together they switched on and adjusted the

  bypass machine, which would draw the blood out of Harrison's body and

  gradually warm it to one hundred degrees. Once warmed, the blood would

  be pumped back into the still-blue patient through another tube feeding

  a needle inserted in a thigh vein.

  With the process begun, more urgent work awaited than time to do it.

  Harrison's vital signs, currently nonexistent, had to be monitored for

  the first indications of response to therapy. The treatment already

  provided by the paramedics needed to be reviewed to determine if a

  previously administered dose of epinephrina heart-stimulating

  hormone-was so large as to rule out giving more of it to Harrison at

  this time. Meanwhile Jonas pulled up a wheeled cart of medications,

  prepared by Helga before the body had arrived, and began to calculate

  the variety and quantity of ingredients for a chemical cocktail of

  free-radical scavengers designed to retard tissue damage.

  "Sixty-one minutes," Gina said, updating them on the estimated length of

  time that the patient had been dead. "Wow! That's a long time talking

  to the angels. Getting this one back isn't going to be a weenie roast,

  boys and girls."

  "Forty-eight degrees," Helga reported solemnly, noting the cadaver's

  body temperature as it slowly rose toward the temperature of the room

  around it.

  Death is just an ordinary pathological state, Jonas reminded himself.

  Pathological states can usually be reversed.

  With her incongruously slender, long-fingered hands, Helga folded a

  cotton surgical towel over the patient's genitals, and Jonas recognized

  that she was not merely making a concession to modesty but was

  performing an act of kindness that expressed an important new attitude

  toward Harrison. A dead man had no interest in modesty. A dead man did

  not require kindness- Helga's consideration was a way of saying that she

  believed this man would once more be one of the living, welcomed back to

  the brotherhood and sisterhood of humanity, and that he should be

  treated henceforth with tenderness and compassion and not just as an

  interesting and challenging prospect for reanimation.

  2

  The weeds and grass were as high as his knees, lush from an unusually

  rainy winter. A cool breeze whispered through the meadow.

  Occasionall
y bats and night birds passed overhead or swooped low off to

  one side, briefly drawn to him as if they recognized a fellow predator

  but immediately repelled when they sensed the terrible difference

  between him and them.

  He stood defiantly, gazing up at the stars shining between the steadily

  thickening clouds that moved eastward across the late-winter sky- He

  believed that the universe was a kingdom of death, where life was so

  rare as to be freakish, a place filled with countless barren planets, a

  testament not to the creative powers of God but to the sterility of His

  imagination and the triumph of the forces of darkness aligned against

  Him. Of the two realities that coexisted in this universe-life and

  death-life was the smaller and less consequential. As a citizen in the

  land of the living, your existence was limited to years, months, weeks,

  days, hours. But as a citizen in the kingdom of the dead, you were

  immortal.

  He lived in the borderland.

  He hated the world of the living, into which he had been born. He

  loathed the pretense to meaning and manners and morals and virtue that

  the living embraced. The hypocrisy of human interaction, wherein

  selflessness was publicly championed and selfishness privately pursued,

  both amused and disgusted him. Every act of kindness seemed, to him, to

  be performed only with an eye to the payback that might one day be

  extracted from the recipient.

  His greatest scorn and sometimes fury-as reserved for those who spoke of

  love and made claims to feeling such a thing. Love, he knew, was like

  all the other high-minded virtues that family, teachers, and priests

  blathered about. It didn't exist. It was a sham, a way to control

  others, a con.

  He cherished, instead, the darkness and strange anti-life of the world

  of the dead in which he belonged but to which he could not yet return.

  His rightful place was with the damned. He felt at home among those who

  despised love, who knew that the pursuit of pleasure was the sole

  purpose of existence. Self was primary. There were no such things as

  "wrong" and sin.

  The longer he stared at the stars between the clouds, the brighter they

  appeared, until each pinpoint of light in the void seemed to prick his

  eyes.

  Tears of discomfort blurred his vision, and he lowered his gaze to the

  earth at his feet. Even at night, the land of the living was too bright

  for the likes of him. He didn't need light to see. His vision had

  adapted to the perfect blackness of death, to the catacombs of Hell.

  Light was not merely superfluous to eyes like his; it was a nuisance

  and, at times, an abomination.

  Ignoring the heavens, he walked out of the field, returning to the

  cracked pavement. His footsteps echoed hollowly through this place that

  had once been filled with the voices and laughter of multitudes.

  If he had wanted, he could have moved with the silence of a stalking

  cat.

  The clouds parted and the lunar lamp beamed down, making him wince.

  On all sides, the decaying structures of his hideaway cast stark and

  jagged shadows in moonlight that would have seemed wan to anyone else

  but that, to him, shimmered on the pavement as if it were luminous

  paint.

  He took a pair of sunglasses from an inside pocket of his leather jacket

  and put them on. That was better.

  For a moment he hesitated, not sure what he wanted to do with the rest

  of the night. He had two basic choices, really: spend the remaining

  predawn hours with the living or with the dead. This time it was even

  an easier choice than usual, for in his current mood, he much preferred

  the dead.

  He stepped out of a moon-shadow that resembled a giant, canted, broken

  wheel, and he headed toward the moldering structure where he kept the

  dead. His collection.

  3

  "Sixty-four minutes," Gina said, consulting her Rolex with the pink

  leather band. "This one could get messy."

  Jonas couldn't believe how fast time was passing, just speeding by,

  surely faster than usual, as if there had been some freak acceleration

  of the continuum. But it was always the same in situations like this,

  when the difference between life and death was measured in minutes and

  seconds.

  He glanced at the blood, more blue than red, moving through the

  clear-plastic exsanguination tube into the purring bypass machine. The

  average human body contained five liters of blood. Before the

  resuscitation team was done with Harrison, his five liters would have

  been repeatedly recycled, heated, and filtered.

  Ken Nakamura was at a light board, studying head and chest X rays and

  body-sonograms that had been taken in the air ambulance during its

  hundred-eighty-mile-per-hour journey from the base of the San

  Bernardinos to the hospital in Newport Beach. Kari was bent close to

  the patient's face, examining his eyes through an ophthalmoscope,

  checking for indications of dangerous cranial pressure from a buildup of

  fluid on the brain.

  With Helga's assistance, Jonas had filled a series of syringes with

  large doses of various free-radical neutralizers. Vitamins E and C were

  effective scavengers and had the advantage of being natural substances,

  but he also intended to administer a lazeroid-tirilazad mesylate-and

  phenyl tertiary butyl nitrone.

  Free radicals were fast-moving, unstable molecules that ricocheted

  through the body, causing chemical reactions that damaged most cells

  with which they came into contact. Current theory held that they were

  the primary cause of human aging, which explained why natural scavengers

  like vitamins E and C boosted the immune system and, in long-term users,

  promoted a more youthful appearance and higher energy levels. Free

  radicals were a by-product of ordinary metabolic processes and were

  always present in the system. But when the body was deprived of

  oxygenated blood for an extended period, even with the protection of

  hypothermia, huge pools of free radicals were created in excess of

  anything the body had to deal with nsrmally. When the heart was started

  again, renewed circulation swept those destructive molecules through the

  brain, where their impact was devastating.

  The vitamin and chemical scavengers would deal with the free radicals

  before they could cause any irreversible damage. At least that was the

  hope.

  Jonas inserted the three syringes in different ports that fed the main

  intravenous line in the patient's thigh, but he did not yet inject the

  contents.

  "Sixty-five minutes," Gina said.

  A long time dead, Jonas thought.

  It was very near the record for a successful reanimation.

  In spite of the cool air, Jonas felt sweat breaking out on his scalp,

  under his thinning hair. He always got too involved, emotional. Some

  of his colleagues disapproved of his excessive empathy; they believed a

  judicious perspective was insured by the maintenance of a professional

  distance between the doctor and those he treated. But no patient was

  jus
t a patient.

  Every one of them was loved and needed by someone. Jonas was acutely

  aware that if he failed a patient, he was failing more than one person,

  bringing pain and suffering to a wide network of relatives and friends.

  Even when he was treating someone like Harrison, of whom Jonas knew

  virtually nothing, he began to imagine the lives interlinking with that

  of the patient, and he felt responsible to them as much as he would have

  if he had known them intimately.

  "The guy looks clean," Ken said, turning away from the X rays and

  sonograms. "No broken bones. No internal injuries."

  "But those sonograms were taken after he was dead," Jonas noted, "so

  they don't show functioning organs."

  "Right. We'll snap some pictures again when he's reanimated, make sure

  nothing's ruptured, but it looks good so far."

  Straightening up from her examination of the dead man's eyes, Kari

  Dovell said, "There might be concussion to deal with. Hard to say from

  what I can see."

  "Sixty-six minutes."

  "Seconds count here. Be ready, people," Jonas said, although he knew

  they were ready.

  The cool air couldn't reach his head because of his surgical cap, but

  the sweat on his scalp felt icy. Shivers cascaded through him.

  Blood, heated to one hundred degrees, began to move through the clear

  plastic IV line and into the body through a thigh vein, surging

  rhythmically to the artificial pulse of the bypass machine.

 

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