Part 10 (2/2)
”What's her Glasgow score?” Jack said.
Gupta gave him a puzzled look. ”You know the Glasgow scale?”
Jack nodded. His father, Gia, and Vicky had all been comatose at one time or another. He knew more about comas than he wished.
Gupta moved toward the bed. ”Well, strictly speaking, her score is eight. She makes incomprehensible sounds now and then, and she responds to painful stimuli. Here. I show you.”
He pulled a little rubber-headed percussion mallet from his pocket and removed a pinlike instrument from its handle. Then he raised a flap of sheet to reveal Weezy's left hand.
”Watch.”
He lifted it about six inches off the bed; when he let go it dropped like a piece of meat.
”Now watch.”
He jabbed her palm with the pin. Her hand jerked away and her eyes fluttered open for a second.
”Hey!” Eddie said.
But Gupta was already moving to the other side of the bed, saying, ”So, that gives her a score of eight. But this does not fit with that score.”
He lifted the sheet to reveal her right hand. Its index fingertip was scratching the sheet in a circular motion.
”See? Intermittent spontaneous movement. That should move her above an eight but I'm not sure where. The movement is certainly not consciously directed.”
”What's the prognosis?” Eddie said.
”Good, I think.”
”When will she wake up?”
”Oh, that I cannot say. It would be foolish of me to predict.”
As they talked Jack stared at Weezy's finger where it scratched the sheet. After a moment he began to sense a pattern in the movements. She'd make somewhere between fifteen and twenty loops-her movements were too rapid and small for an accurate count-stop for maybe two seconds, then start again. Almost as if ...
”Doctor Gupta,” he said, motioning him over and pointing to her hand. ”Could she be writing something?”
He leaned closer, stared a moment, then straightened, shaking his head.
”It is highly unlikely. The movement is most likely the result of random neuron firings.” He started for the door. ”I must continue rounds. I shall check on her later. In the meantime, please fill in the nurses on as much of your sister's medical history as you know.”
When he was gone, Eddie stepped up to Jack's side and together they stared at Weezy's moving finger.
”Doesn't look very random to me,” Jack said.
”You really think she's writing something?”
Jack nodded. ”Mene, Mene, Tekel Upharsin.”
”What?”
”Nothing.” He leaned close to her ear. ”Weezy, it's Jack. You told Eddie to call me and he did. If you can hear me, stop moving your finger.”
The fingertip kept up its relentless pattern.
”Okay, then, if you can hear me, draw an 'X' with your finger.”
No change. The looping motions continued. As Jack watched them, an idea formed. He straightened and turned to Eddie.
”You going to the nursing station?”
”Yeah.”
”Good. I'll come with you.”
The station lay fifty feet down the hall. While Eddie hunted the head nurse to background her on Weezy, Jack leaned over the counter and got a candy striper's attention.
”Can I help you?” She was all of sixteen and chewing gum with her mouth open.
”I hope so. I need to scrounge a notepad and some carbon paper.”
She stopped chewing. ”Carbon paper?” She turned and called to another girl who was maybe a year older. ”Hey, Brit? Do we have any, like, carbon paper?”
Brit looked at her like she'd just spoken Farsi. ”Carbon paper? Like what's paper? Like what's that that? Is that, like, a color color?”
Feeling terminally Tria.s.sic, Jack said, ”Never mind. How about we try this ... ?”
Two minutes later he returned to Weezy's room with a yellow legal pad, a black Sharpie, and a roll of quarter-inch adhesive tape. He pulled a chair up to her right side and seated himself before her hand. He taped the Sharpie alongside her index tip so that its point jutted just beyond the fingernail. Then he placed the pad under her finger and let her rip.
At first all he got was an irregular blotch of black scribbles. So he decided to slide the paper along under the tip. And as he did, figures that looked like letters began to appear. He kept working at it, varying the speed until ...
”What on Earth are you doing?” Eddie said as he returned to the room carrying some papers.
”Trying to find out what she's writing.”
”You heard the doctor-random neurons.”
Yeah, Jack had heard. But he knew doctors could be as pigheaded as anyone else, refusing to see what was dangling before their noses because it didn't fit their preconceived notions.
”Really?” Jack held up the latest sheet he'd run under her finger. ”This look random to you?”
Eddie frowned and squinted at it. ” 'b.u.mmyhouse'? What's that mean?”
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