go.
âHelp,â she whispered. âHelp. Help. Help.â She had to say it another time or two before she could say it loud enough for anyone to hear her. Then she was batting through the doors into the hall, running in her soft flat shoes, screaming for all she was worth. Leaving bright red footprints behind her.
Ten minutes later a pair of officers in riot gear had strapped Manx down to his cot, just in case he opened his eyes and tried to get up. But the doctor who eventually arrived to examine him said to unlash him.
âThis guy has been in a bed since 2001. He has to be turned four times a day to keep from getting sores. Even if he wasnât a gork, heâs too weak to go anywhere. After seven years of muscle atrophy, I doubt he could sit up on his own.â
Ellen was listening from over next to the doorsâif Manx opened his eyes again, she planned to be the first one out of the roomâbut when the doctor said that, she walked across the floor on stiff legs and pulled her sleeve back from her right wrist to show the bruises where Manx had grabbed her.
âDoes that look like something done by a guy too weak to sit up? I thought he was going to yank my arm out of the socket.â Her feet stung almost as badly as her bruised wrist. She had stripped off her blood-soaked pantyhose and gone at her feet with scalding water and antibiotic soap until they were raw. She was in her gym sneakers now. The other shoes were in the garbage. Even if they could be saved, she didnât think sheâd ever be able to put them on again.
The doctor, a young Indian named Patel, gave her an abashed, apologetic look and bent to shine a flashlight in Manxâs eyes. His pupils did not dilate. Patel moved the flashlight back and forth, but Manxâs eyes remained fixed on a point just beyond Patelâs left ear. The doctor clapped his hands an inch from Manxâs nose. Manx did not blink. Patel gently closed Manxâs eyes and examined the reading from the EKG they were running.
âThereâs nothing here thatâs any different from any of the last dozen EKG readings,â Patel said. âPatient scores a nine on the Glasgow scale, shows slow alpha-wave activity consistent with alpha coma. I think he was just talking in his sleep, Nurse. It even happens to gorks like this guy.â
âHis eyes were open, â she said. âHe looked right at me. He knew my name. He knew my sonâs name.â
Patel said, âEver had a conversation around him with one of the other nurses? No telling what the guy mightâve unconsciously picked up. You tell another nurse, âOh, hey, my son just won the spelling bee.â Manx hears it and regurgitates it mid-dream.â
She nodded, but a part of her was thinking, He knew Josiahâs middle name, something she was sure she had never mentioned to anyone here in the hospital. Thereâs a place for Josiah John Thornton in Christmasland, Charlie Manx had said to her, and thereâs a place for you in the House of Sleep .
âI never got his blood in,â she said. âHeâs been anemic for a couple weeks. Picked up a urinary-tract infection from his catheter. Iâll go get a fresh pack.â
âNever mind that. Iâll get the old vampire his blood. Look. Youâve had a nasty little scare. Put it behind you. Go home. You only have, what? An hour left on your shift? Take it. Take tomorrow, too. Got some last-minute shopping to finish? Go do it. Stop thinking about this and relax. Itâs Christmas, Nurse Thornton,â the doctor said, and winked at her. âDonât you know itâs the most wonderful time of the year?â
Copyright
A version of âTwittering from the Circus of the Deadâ first appeared in The New Dead , edited by Christopher Golden, in 2010.
This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the authorâs imagination and are not to