Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Thunder Rise


During the #coronavirus pandemic, I am regularly posting stories and selections from my published collections and novels. Read for free! Reading is the best at this time!

This is the fourth free offering: An excerpt from “Thunder Rise: A Novel of Terror,” my first published book and the first volume of the Thunder Rise trilogy..



CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

Friday, October 10

Maureen McDonald was appreciably worse.

She was back in Bostwick’s office this morning, two weeks and two days after her last visit. Her mother was on the verge of panic. Bostwick didn’t blame her. If she’d been his child, he’d have been there, too.

Because things didn’t look good. Things didn’t look good at all. Maureen’s temperature was 103.8, and she was enveloped by a faint, sweaty odor, an odor not dissimilar to garlic—the exact same odor, Bostwick thought with a chill, that terminally ill patients get as their days are winding down. She was still congested, still occasionally experiencing sharp abdominal pains (“like a knife,” she said, “stickin’ in my stomach.”). Every lymph node he touched was swollen and tender.

But he hadn’t needed an examination to conclude there was something really frightening going on with this child. He’d sensed that the instant she’d come into his office, shuffling listlessly, her head down, her shoulders hunched, as if the world no longer held any interest for her. A little more than two weeks ago she’d been under the weather, but if you peeled back the aches and pains a bit, you could still see her spirit, alive and well. Now there was barely a hint of that spirit. Now her eyes had a lifeless, distant glaze to them, as if she’d grown tired of seeing. The eyes especially bothered him. He’d learned there was more than a grain of truth to the old adage that eyes were windows to the soul.


The original cover: William Morrow, 1989.
If it hadn’t developed so quickly, he would have suspected cancer . . . or AIDS.

He hated what he had to subject her to, but there was no choice. It was time to go on a medical fishing expedition.

“Can you be in Pittsfield this afternoon?” he asked Susie when her daughter had shuffled back to the waiting room to claim the lollipop her eyes said she didn’t care if she had or not.

“Yes,” Susie said.

“Good. I want you at Berkshire Medical Center at one. I’ll call and make the arrangements. She’s going to need additional tests.”

“What kind of tests?” Susie sounded as if she’d just been sentenced.

“Blood tests. X-rays. Possibly a liver scan. I’ll have a better idea after consulting with Dr. Miller. He’s an internist at Berkshire Medical. Also a personal friend. A very capable physician.”

“Doctor?”

“Yes?”

“What do you think it is?” Bostwick could tell she was close to losing control. His eyes avoided hers, and the examining room suddenly seemed too small, too quiet, too warm. He’d been here before. Oh, yes. Ordering tests for suspected leukemia cases evoked this mood. Getting positive test results back and delivering that horrible news evoked it, too.

“I don’t know,” he said. “And I’m being completely candid. I just don’t know.”

“You don’t think it’s a cold, do you?” Susie said, allowing herself only the faintest trace of hope. 

“Like a really long cold?”

“No. Not anymore.”

“Is it a—a virus?”

“It could be. We’ll know better after this afternoon. I’m ordering her workup stat.”

Susie was silent. In the last two minutes Bostwick had seen the color drain from her cheeks. “You don’t think it’s—you don’t think it’s cancer, do you?” She pronounced that word superstitiously, as if saying it too loudly might jinx her.

“I’d be very surprised if it were. It’s very rare that cancer—any kind of cancer—develops so quickly.”
“It’s been two months almost.”

“And that seems like a long time—and it is, in terms of what you’ve been through—but disease-wise, two months is a snap of the fingers.”

“Doctor?”

“Yes?”

“She’s going to be all right, isn’t she?”

In all his years of medicine—years in which he had had a distressing amount of practice in delivering the grimmest possible news—he’d never learned how to answer this question without feeling like the world’s biggest asshole.

“I hope so,” he said. “Now I want you to get going. The sooner you’re there, the quicker you’ll be home.”

Crossroad Press editions: Audible and Kindle.

For two weeks he’d been trying to piece things together.

Something’s going on. Something I’ve never seen in almost a decade of family practice.

That much was indisputable now. This wasn’t your basic infection taking the scenic tour through the local youth, a bout of unusually stubborn rhinovirus that sooner or later would be put off the bus by said youths’ immune systems. It had gone on too long. On Morgantown’s scale, this was as close to a public health crisis as anything in Bostwick’s experience.

Because there were too many sick kids out there. Not a townful, or a schoolful, but seventeen kids (he’d counted) with no history of chronic disease or unusual susceptibility who all of a sudden were sick as dogs. Seventeen kids, up from a dozen two weeks ago, all with a common set of symptoms, all with parents getting more uptight by the minute. Some—roughly half, Bostwick calculated—seemed to be getting progressively sicker. A smaller group appeared to be on some kind of strange disease seesaw: flat on their backs one day, chipper as you please the next. A couple, Jimmy Ellis among them, seemed to have recovered and not relapsed—if that was the word. There seemed to be no rhyme or reason.

For two weeks he’d puzzled over it, so intensely that his wife and children had started to comment. For two weeks he’d done his homework. Taken out the case folders each evening and gone over every iota of information with a magnifying glass. He’d done follow-ups on every child, which had meant house calls in a couple of instances. Maureen was the first he’d referred to Berkshire Medical. He knew she would not be the last.

It could be almost anything.

That’s what was beginning to give him chills.

It could be bacterium. It could be virus. It could be some kind of obscure but cumulatively lethal poison. It could be something in the water at school. It could be something in the food. Something in the air. Something well documented in the public health texts. Something utterly unprecedented.
It could be the bloody Martians, for all he knew, dropping down to field-test their latest extraterrestrial bug on the unsuspecting inhabitants of Planet Earth.

If he’d been unable to pinpoint the cause, he’d at least uncovered some potentially valuable common denominators. All the children were prepubescent. All except for two preschoolers went to Morgantown Elementary, and both those preschoolers had older siblings who did. All lived on the same side of town, the side near Thunder Rise. There was something else, too, although he wasn’t sure how much significance he should attach to it. Nightmares. Each kid had reported frequent nightmares. Probably the fevers would explain that. Kids with temps not only had nightmares but could actually hallucinate.

So could brains poisoned with certain chemicals.

“Will you call me as soon as you get the results?” Susie asked on her way out.

“Immediately,” Bostwick promised.

“Thank you, Doctor.”

For what? he wanted to say. For telling you in so many words that your kid’s slowly going down the tubes, and I don’t have a clue why? For suggesting between the lines that if somebody doesn’t come up with something soon, little Maureen McDonald could actually . . . die? And as things stand at this very moment there’s not a blessed thing we can do about it?

“You’re welcome,” he said, and again he had to avoid eye contact. He felt defeated.
When she had closed the door, he picked up the phone and called the Boston headquarters of the Massachusetts Department of Public Health.

“Epidemiology,” he told the operator.

His question was if anything like this had been reported recently anywhere else in the state. The answer was not comforting. The answer was no.





(Should you wish to purchase any of my collections and books, fiction or non-fiction, visit www.gwaynemiller.com/books.htm)



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