Alien Hunter: Underworld (23 page)

Read Alien Hunter: Underworld Online

Authors: Whitley Strieber

Flynn felt a tide of relief flow through him. It was like being unexpectedly rescued from a certain death, he thought. If it was rescue.

“How long will the surgery take?”

“Given none of the complications you mentioned, no more than two or three hours.”

Two or three hours. He wondered if he would live through it or not. He wondered if the things would move away from the surgeon's forceps. He wondered a lot of things.

“Let's go,” he said. “Let's do this.”

He followed Dr. John Shelton down the long white corridor and up an elevator to the surgical floor, his old friend with him. They came to heavy double doors marked
SURGICAL SUITE. NO ADMITTANCE.

The doctor punched some numbers into a keypad. They went through the door and into the gleaming, unsure world of what Flynn feared would be a far more difficult surgery than Dr. Shelton expected.

 

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

DR. SHELTON
had a large office with a window looking out on a wide swathe of sky.

“When did you last eat?”

“Two nights ago.”

“Do you take any medications?”

“No.”

“No aspirin, ibuprofen, anything like that?”

“No.”

“Liquids?”

“This morning. Glass of water.”

“Okay. I'm not expecting this to be a problematic surgery. We will do what's called an awake brain surgery, and I'm going to ask you various questions during the process. We're not actually entering the brain, but we are going to be right in the cognitive region, so I'll want to be certain we're not disturbing anything as we work.”

“I'll need my colleague present in the operating room. And keep staff to a minimum. Do not describe the objects or ask any questions about them that your staff may—”

“Sir, I'm going to need to stop you right there. I'm going to need my staff's full functionality.”

“Then they're all going to have to sign security agreements. I'll need them to know that and be comfortable with it.”

“I can assure you they'll sign. I have a resident, four nurses, and my anesthesiologist, Dr. Kampmann. Just a moment.” He leaned into the intercom on his desk. “Julie, we're going to be doing a full staff pre-op with this patient prior to surgery. Can you let everybody know?” He turned his attention to Mac. “You'll need to prep and be in scrubs, and I'll want you to remain in a specified area of the operating room, and not to speak. Are those conditions acceptable?”

“Fine by me,” Mac said. Flynn nodded.

They followed the doctor to the patient care unit, and Flynn removed his outer clothes, then placed his wallet, watch, cell phone, and keys in the locker provided. He gave Mac the key. “Don't come in here and steal all my money.” When they were kids and Mac had been poor, he used to mug Flynn and Eddie practically every Friday night.

A nurse came in, a stocky black guy with a tight smile. These medical teams weren't used to surgeries coming at them unexpectedly, outside of ER. A unit like this ran on a complex, tightly controlled routine. “Okay, we got to shave your head,” said the nurse. “This is the good part. You're gonna like you bald, lemme tell you. You'll never go back.”

Now wearing nothing but a blue hospital gown and his underwear, Flynn was taken to a small, single-chair barber's station. The nurse said, “You get some of the women in here, it can be damn rough. But, you know, you want to get whatever's in there out more than you want to keep your hair. What you got, anyway? I got you pegged for an injury. Am I right?”

“You're right.”

“I know this stuff, I've been on the unit awhile.”

He rolled on surgical gloves, then lathered Flynn's head with barber's soap.

There was only a small mirror at the barber station, but Flynn could see himself in it, and as the CNA continued working, he saw a transformation from a man with short salt-and-pepper hair and hard eyes to a guy with no hair and even harder-looking eyes.

“There,” the nurse said, “now you're ready to do some serious business. I want to wish you all the luck in the world.”

Back in Flynn's patient cubicle, another nurse swabbed his head with iodine solution. Mac said, “You look scarier than hell.”

“Yeah, big orange heads tend to be pretty scary.”

“I meant, before she painted you. I'm telling you, the man who came across this room just now had death in his eye. It was damn impressive, I have to say.”

The anesthesiologist came in. “I'm Dr. Kampmann. I understand that you're Errol Carroll?”

“Flynn.”

“Okay, Flynn, now what we're going to use is a type of anesthetic that will deaden pain in your scalp and skull, but leave you fully conscious. There won't be any tranquilizer solution, but I'll be standing by with it, so if you feel too agitated or restless, just ask me, and I'll instill some into your IV. And we'll have general anesthesia ready as well. I assume that you've never had a craniotomy prior to this one?”

“I have not.”

“At first, there will be a sound from the electric saw, which some patients may find disturbing. These are going to be two three-centimeter exposures over the affected areas. Just enough for the endoscope. You'll be able to see, hear, and respond to questions, but your head will be in a restraining mechanism, which can become uncomfortable. We don't want you to move, so if you have any discomfort at all, even an itchy nose, let us know.”

“Will I be tied down?”

“Yes, you will.”

“I need to see my colleague alone for a moment.”

The doctor and the nurses withdrew, and Mac came in.

“I'm going to be restrained. If anything happens, anything you can't explain, any movement in the room—you can see their movement, can't you, at least somewhat?”

“I can see a flash off a windshield a mile away, but not those things, not like you.”

“What can you see?”

“Things they move past. If they make a curtain flutter, no matter how slightly, I'm gonna see that.”

“I think there's a high probability that they'll enter the operating room. They'll try to disrupt the procedure.”

“Flynn, I've got to ask you, are you maybe broadcasting to them right now? Can they listen to you?”

“I assume so, but I'm not telling them anything they don't already know.”

“I hope you aren't.”

“Doctor, we're done,” he said.

Dr. Kampmann had gone, but two nurses came and set up Flynn's vital sign leads and IV, then wheeled him down another bright corridor and into the operating room.

A warm sense of calm enveloped him. Dr. Kampmann had told him there would be no tranquilizer in the IV, but obviously that was not the case.

“Flynn, can you hear me?” Dr. Kampmann asked, upon entering the OR.

“Yes.”

“Do you feel any nausea, any dizziness at all?”

“None.”

They moved him into a bed that was completely surrounded by equipment. This was his second hospital visit in three days, and also the second in his life.

What seemed like only a moment later, he was coming back to consciousness.

“Can you hear me, Flynn?”

“Yes, I can.”

“Do you know who's speaking?”

He looked toward the green-swathed face that was peering at him. “You sound like Dr. Kampmann.”

Kampmann looked past Flynn. “He's back with us, John.”

“Hey, there, Flynn. We have both incisions opened, and I'm looking at the foreign object on the left.”

“Mac—Frank—are you here?”

“I'm here, Flynn. Back over here.” Flynn glimpsed a green-gloved hand raised above an array of monitors.

“Flynn, can you please begin counting backwards from a hundred?”

Flynn found that counting backwards was harder to do than he'd assumed. He had to think carefully, and he was making mistakes.

“The first object is out,” Dr. Shelton said. “It's a silver disk. There are cilia attached to it. A manufactured object.”

Kampmann was looking at him. Flynn could see the questioning frown.

“Doctor, the objects need to be in sealed containers. This is very important.”

“Sealed, yes, we can do that.”

Flynn became aware of a distant, repetitive sound. “Is that a Klaxon?”

“Fire alarm,” Mac called. “That's what it sounds like.”

Morris was making his move, no question in Flynn's mind. “Can the doors be locked?”

“Nurse, see to it,” Shelton snapped. “Flynn, please resume your count.”

Voices rose outside. Soon, there came a smell of burning plastic. Then, over the intercom, “Doctor, can you close?”

“I need twenty minutes.”

“They're asking us to evacuate the building. It's on fire lockdown. It's not a drill.”

“I can't pull out—I have this patient's head wide open.”

A nurse said in a shrill voice, “Smoke entering by the vents.”

“Isolate us,” Dr. Sheldon snapped. “Shut down oxygen.” Then, more quietly, “Oh, God.”

“We have fire in the ceiling, Doctor!”

“Closing up.”

“Is it out yet?”

“One is out, sir. One is still in situ. But I have to pull out.”

Flynn could not allow that. Whatever might happen, if Shelton stopped now, he doubted there would ever be another chance like this.

“Do not pull out, Doctor. This is a critical emergency.”

“You got that right.”

“Do not!”

There no reply. Was he still working? Flynn couldn't tell.

Hammering came on the door. “Fire department, open up!”

“For God's sake, tell them the patient's brain is exposed!”

“Is the second one out?”

Shelton didn't answer.

“Mac, help me here! Make him do this!”

A long stream of burning plastic came down from above. One of the nurses broke out a fire extinguisher and began attacking the flames as best she could.

Mac came pushing his way through the equipment. “Doc, you gotta do this. It's a national emergency.”

“It's one man.”

“The man is important, Doctor. I think you know enough to understand that.”

Screams rose outside. The room grew dim. Black smoke seethed along the ceiling, shot through with deep red flickers. Once again, fire from above. Revealing, too. Morris had not felt able to send a team into a crowded building. Worth remembering.

“Where are we?”

“I told you I am closing up, whoever you are.”

“No, Doctor,” Mac said, “I'm so sorry, but you are finishing.”

“Jesus Christ, put that down!”

“Mac, what're you doing?”

“You do it, Doctor, or she's gonna be wearing a second smile.”

The nurse Mac had grabbed was limp with shock. Mac's knife gleamed at her throat.

Every particle of honor and decency in Flynn's body rebelled at the idea of doing it this way, but he saw no other choice.

A group of burning ceiling tiles fell into the operating room. One of the nurses screamed, tearing at her burning scrubs. Somebody else threw the doors open. Flynn was aware of great, dark shapes moving in the murk of smoke. Firemen. Then he heard roaring and saw that they were training a mist nozzle on the ceiling, enough to drive back the flames for a few more seconds.

“Okay, it's done. We're done.”

“Let me see them. Both of them.”

“Here, you, let her go. I am so sorry, Sylvie!”

“Who are these people, Doctor? Because this is insane—what's going on?”

“I don't know. Somebody get this patient out of here. He's closed, he can be evacuated.”

“Give me the objects,” Flynn said.

Shelton thrust the two bottles into his hands. These things were very different from the one that had been pulled out of his leg. They were the size of tiny buttons, their upper surfaces gleaming. Hanging down from their lower surfaces were long streams of cilia, so tiny and numerous that they looked like tendrils of smoke.

As he was wheeled out amid scores of firemen, nurses, and other patients under evacuation, Flynn watched mesmerized as, again and again, the two objects threw themselves against the glass walls of the bottles they were imprisoned in. Finally, they pressed themselves up against the glass like two mean little eyes and remained there, as close to him as they could get.

Waves of dizziness kept sweeping over him. Both doctors stayed with him on the fire stairs as he was carried down on a narrow portable chair.

“Mac,” Flynn said, “I need you.”

They had reached the lobby.

“This man needs recovery time,” Shelton said to nobody in particular. “I need to get him into another surgery center.”

“Mac,” Flynn said, “you take these. I want you to go back to the parking structure and stay there. Go deep as you can. If it has a subbasement, use it.”

“You think that'll stop the signal, because—”

“I have no idea.”

“Flynn, Morris is gonna come after me. You know it, and I know it.”

He had a point. “Tell you what, leave them in the car. Then—Doctor—where are we going?”

“Building Forty-two. You'll be in recovery there for about four hours.”

“So put them in the car and come on foot to Building Forty-two. Get away from them, and stay away from them.”

They went out into a throbbing forest of fire equipment, dozens of vehicles choking every inch of space around the building. Their pumps roared like an angry ocean. Brass and red paint gleamed in the sun. Two companies had extended their ladders to the roof, and pulsing, sweating hoses ran up both of them, managed by firemen at the midpoint, who fed hose to men on the roof.

“My patient is immediate post-op!” Shelton shouted. “I need him moved right now.” He added to Flynn, “And I don't want to see you again, ever. You let me know where to send your records, I'll be glad to do that. But I do not want you anywhere near me or this medical center or any of its personnel ever again.”

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