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Change of Heart

CraftyLion3D

Moderator
Staff member
Synopsis - Beth Hastings has a secret and it involves her sister Alex. When Alex ends in hospital in a coma with heart failure, Beth tries to hide her guilt as well as her crumbling sanity. Meanwhile, nurses Claudia and Gareth must work out how a healthy Alex ended with health failure to begin with.
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Chapter 1 - Part 1

Tap. Tap. Tap-tap-tap.

Alex winced slightly. Beth’s tapping was getting on her nerves and she had been doing it for the past half hour. They were sitting in the waiting room of the office belonging to their father’s lawyer and Alex had closed her eyes in meditation. The constant typing of a computer from the lawyer’s secretary was barely tolerable. Beth’s nervousness, on the other hand, was driving her to distraction.

‘Will you stop that? It’s driving me nuts!’

Beth clenched her fist in a forced effort to stop her own nerves and flashed her sister a small grin.

‘Cover your ears then’ she teased but Alex wasn’t amused.

‘Oh, very funny.’

Alex’s response surprised her and Beth just shook her head in bewilderment. Surely, she could see the funny side of the comment. At that moment, their father’s lawyer made an appearance, collecting some paperwork from his secretary before focusing his attention on the sisters. He looked a little worst for wear and Beth surmised he had probably had a fairly stressful day.

‘Sorry I’m late,’ he apologised, as he shook hands with the pair. ‘I was help up in court. This way please.’

The office he led them into was small and cluttered. If Beth thought his appearance was due to the stresses of the day’s work, the appearance of the office completely overturn her pervious impression of him. The in-out tray on the small wooden desk was flowing with papers and the pile of books that was resting on the edge of the table looked like it was about to topple over any moment.

Both Alex and Beth invited themselves to sit on two plastic chairs opposite the desk as the lawyer rummaged through the chaos on his desk.

‘Now, it appears your father wrote a will before he passed on,’ he informed the sisters, sifting through the multitude of papers piled up in the in-out tray.

Alex could hear the lawyer panting slightly as he desperately tried to maintain a state of outer calm in the height of increasing pressure.

‘Just bear with me,’ he blushed, as a manila folder filled with fell off the table into a nearby bin despite his best attempts to catch it. ‘It’s here somewhere.’

Beth and Alex exchanged bemused smiles but neither made any attempt to clear up after the lawyer. After what felt like an eternity, he pulled out an envelope from the bottom of the tray.

‘Ah! Here it is!’ he announced triumphantly, before clearing his throat and tearing open the envelope to produce the legal document. He gave an embarrassed smile and proceeded to read the contents of the will. ‘It says here … “I, Matthew Joseph Hasting, hereby leave my collection of 13th Century coins to my eldest daughter, Bethany Joanne Hasting. To my youngest daughter, Alexandra Charlotte Hasting, I leave the house and the amount currently residing in my combined bank accounts to the sum of $750,000.”’

Beth’s jaw just dropped in disbelief.

‘Whoa! Wait a second,’ she interrupted in protest. ‘I just get a brunch of lousy coins and Alex gets the house and all the money?’

‘Look, don’t worry about it,’ Alex spoke up, failing to see what all the fuss was about. ‘We’ll share it amongst ourselves.’

Beth had had enough. What was she going to do with a collection of rare coins? The only use they had for it was in a museum and didn’t help her in the slightest. In no mood to argue, she just stalked out, leaving the lawyer staring after her in shock. Alex cleared her throat, clearly embarrassed by her sister’s behaviour.

‘Sorry about that,’ she apologised to the lawyer and went out after Beth.
 
Alex and Beth were both sitting at the dining table having their meal later that evening. Alex had a strange feeling about what she was consuming. In fact, if she was honest with herself, the tomato juice tasted a little out of the ordinary.

‘There’s something about this juice,’ she mused, taking another sip of it.

Beth just looked up at her curiously.

‘What about it?’

‘It tastes … I dunno … different. Did you buy a different brand or something?’

Beth just shrugged and took a sip of hers. She knew what Alex was trying to imply but wasn’t going to let anything incriminate her.

‘Tastes alright to me,’ she replied, hoping to sound as natural as she possibly could and that Alex wouldn’t pick up on it. ‘Maybe it’s just your tastebuds.’

‘Yeah, maybe …’ Alex sighed and continued her meal.

They ate in silence for a moment until Alex looked up at her sister and found her toying with her food in disinterest.

‘What’s wrong?

‘Uh?’ Beth blinked, then sighed. ‘Oh, nothing. The will reading just rattled me, that’s all. What was Dad thinking? What the hell am I going to do with a bunch of 13th century coins?’

‘They’re probably worth a mint though.’

‘Yeah, but who in their right mind would pay for it? It’s beyond ridiculous! I might has well just donate them to a museum.’

Alex was about to reply when her mobile phone beeped, indicating a new text message. Sheepish, she retrieved it from the depths of her pocket and activated it. Her mouth dropped in shock when she read the contents.

‘I can’t believe he even would do that!’

‘Can’t believe who did what?’ Beth blinked but she had a fair idea who her sister was referring to.

‘He called it off. Through a bloody text message,’ Alex turned to face Beth, hoping for some reassurance from her older sister.

‘Did he say why?’ was all she asked.

‘Only that he was “thinking about it”!’ Alex snorted.

‘Bet there’s someone else and he’s too gutless to tell me.

The bastard!’

Annoyed, she pocketed the phone again and attempted to resume eating. Unfortunately, the most recent turn of events had caused her to loose her appetite. She just stared absent-mindedly at the bowl in front of her. Beth looked at her in sympathy.

‘You okay?’

‘Yeah, sorry. That text just threw me. I just can’t believe he actually called it off!’

‘I don’t blame you,’ Beth responded. ‘Most people do it face-to-face.’

‘Thanks for being so understanding anyway,’ Alex smiled, sipping the juice to wash the spaghetti down.

She still thought there might have been something odd about the taste of the juice but she couldn’t be sure. However, she also speculated there was a high chance that her emotions may be playing a part in the delusion as well and so she didn’t think there was any point mentioning it further.

‘Not a problem,’ Beth smiled. ‘I probably would’ve reacted the some way. Look, I know you’re probably not up to it anymore but try and finish the spaghetti. I’d hate for the smell to permeate the room.’

‘You can talk!’ Alex snorted then paused slightly before sighing. ‘I’m okay. I’m just pissed off with him, that’s all.’

There was another stretch of silence between the sisters as Beth watched Alex eat. Surely, it would’ve have started working by now yet Alex didn’t seem to be suffering any after-effects from it. Perhaps she hadn’t added enough. All her training taught her that it took anywhere between five minutes to fifteen minutes for any symptoms to start showing.

Any moment now, she thought with baited breath. You’re not going to know what hit you.

Beth was starting to get nervous. So much so that she nearly gave herself away and Alex noticed her immediately.

Tap. Tap. Tap-tap-tap.

‘You nervous about something?’ Alex asked with a frown.

‘No, why do you ask?’ Beth blinked in surprise.

She’d been so tense in anticipation, she forgotten where she actually was.

‘You always do that when you’re nervous,’ was the shrugging reply as if the reason for Beth’s anxiety was of no real concern to her.

‘Sorry. Bad habit,’ Beth clenched her fist in a deliberately attempt to stop her nervous twitch.

‘You should do some meditation or something,’ Alex suggested casually, causing Beth to smile sarcastically back at her.

Luckily, Alex failed to notice and she proceeded to polish off her meal. Beth watched her, anxiously waiting for the effects to take hold. Ten minutes had past. The effects should have started by now. Beth watched her expectantly, holding her breath. If this didn’t have any effect on her now, it would’ve been all for nothing and she’d have to come up with another plan.

Just hurry and take affect, will ya! I better not have gone through all this trouble for you not to work! Beth half-pleaded to the foxglove extract in Alex’s juice.

Alex sat there for a moment and wondered what had just happened. She was feeling fine a minute ago. Now, her head was swimming slightly. Maybe it had something to do with the stress she was experiencing from Murray dumping her in such a cowardly fashion. The kitchen around her started spinning slightly and she blinked, trying to clear her increasingly blurred vision.

‘What’s wrong?’ Beth wanted to know but did nothing to assist her.

By now, Alex felt like she was breathing in a vacuum. While she could breathe out, she was having trouble breathing in and, coupled with her extreme vertigo, it was getting very distressing. She began to panic.

‘I … I dunno…’ she whizzed, struggling to explain what she was experiencing but failed miserably. ‘I ... feel weird ...’

Worst yet, the world was spinning around her at a dizzying speed and giving her something of an exploding headache. Beth seemed to take it as a sudden reaction to nerves.

‘And you’re talking about me being nervous,’ she snorted teasing.

Come on! Die already!

Alex wasn’t really listening anymore. By now, she could barely think straight and her thoughts were moving faster than she could vocalise them. For some reason, the muscles of her mouth were refusing to co- operate with her mind. Then, with one last breath, she suddenly slumped into her chair and promptly collapsed onto the ground, twitching slightly.

What’s happening to me? I can’t move. Beth? You still there? Why aren’t you helping me? she called out silently, despite the fact that she knew Beth couldn’t actually hear her. I … can’t … breathe … Help!

As her heart gradually slowed down, her body began to twitch.

Can’t … think … n-need- Alex’s muddled thoughts tried to make sense of what was happening to her. Can’t … think … Cold … very … cold …

Watching her closely, Beth could now see that Alex’s breathing was starting to become compromised. In fact, it was becoming more and more irregular and forced. Beth’s training told her that Alex was going into cardiac arrest and the breathing was merely a sign of the body being starved of oxygen. Agonal breathing was the term they used in the professional circles. It was a situation that warranted immediate medical attention – something that Beth was deliberately failing to give her.

Beth sat there for a moment and gave a small smile. It had finally worked. She took a quick glance at her sister lying on the floor to make sure she was well and truly out then wished she hadn’t. Instead of seeing a perfect result from her mission, she saw a vulnerable and highly fragile younger sister whom she had adored throughout her life.

Now, she was feeling guilty for what she had actually done. Beth took a deep breath and tried in vain to convince herself she had done it for the greater good but a nagging voice inside her head taunted her mercilessly.

Now, you’ve done it, the sneering voice said. Alex is going to die and it’ll be on your head! All because you didn’t have the guts to tell it to her face. You had to go and poison her, didn’t you?

‘Shut up!’ Beth retorted. ‘You have no idea what you’re talking about!’

Are you kidding? I’m you, remember! You better hurry up and do something fast. You’ve wasted enough time arguing with me already!

She wriggled uncomfortably in her seat.

Well? What are you waiting for? Go on!

Tap. Tap. Tap-tap-tap.

‘Alex? You okay?’ she called out, hoping to get some sort of reaction from her sister but failed.

She couldn’t stand the sight of her unconscious sister any longer. In a panic, she got up from her chair and rushed towards her. All of sudden she was now hoping that Alex was just unconscious. Her original plans had now flown straight out the window. Unfortunately, upon assessment, Beth’s worst fears were realised when she discovered Alex wasn’t actually breathing. In fact, her lips had started to turn a greyish-blue.

‘Oh god, no!’ she cried in desperation, gently shaking Alex’s shoulders in an attempt to rouse her again. ‘Come on. Wake up. You can do it. ..’
 
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Chapter 2

There was nothing worst than waking up from a terrifying nightmare, only to find yourself in the middle of nowhere and encased in a vehicle that wasn’t actually working. The last thing Alex Hasting remembered before being jarred out the depths of unconsciousness was the unmistakable ambiance of a hospital intensive care unit. What had stood out most hauntingly for her though wasn’t what she saw, but what she heard. In fact, she couldn’t remember seeing anything at all. It was almost as if someone had thrown a dark cloth bag over her head and forced her to rely on her hearing instead.

Amidst the darkness of her subconsciousness, she vividly remembered hearing the concerned voice of her sister as the latter discussed the well-being of a critically ill patient with one of the nursing staff at the intensive care unit. Alex strongly speculated that the patient in question was actually herself because she discovered she couldn’t directly communicate with either of them.

‘Mum’s due back from holidays in a week,’ her sister had commented wistfully against the mechanical background sound of the ventilator and accompanying heart monitor. ‘I can’t let her see Alex like this. She’ll be guttered!’

To her credit, the female nurse she had spoken to had managed to alleviate her anxiety by suggesting she go home to get some rest. Alex couldn’t remember any more than that because that’s when she surfaced from the tides of unconsciousness, panting heavily in cold sweat.

Now, she was sitting in the driver’s seat of a ute in the middle of a deserted country road with no memory of how she got there which was something of an oddity because her memory was usually pretty good.

She looked down at the National Park and Wildlife Services uniform she was wearing and was overcome with an intense wave of curiosity. She wondered if she was suffering a form of amnesia because she couldn’t remember doing anything in her professional life that resembled the duties or responsibilities of a park ranger either. Shaking her head in dismissal, she fumbled blindly for the ute’s keys that were still embedded in the vehicle’s ignition.

Common sense should have told her that her tunnel vision would have hindered any driving skills she possessed. However, in the wake of her current disposition, her mind was pre-occupied. She hated isolation and longed to return to the vibrancy of modern civilization. Finally locating the keys, she turned on the ignition – or at least she tried. The engine erupted in a stubborn, prolonged splutter before dying out completely. This was the last straw for Alex and she blasted the horn with as much force as her frustration allowed before climbing out and slamming the door behind her.

If Alex had been expecting any sort of reprieve from her predicament outside the ute, she would’ve been sorely disappointed. The drought stricken brown paddocks of the unforgiving countryside surrounding her stretched for kilometres as the harsh summer sun glared down on Alex’s unprotected face. It instantly reminded her of an apocalyptic barren wasteland and her limited peripheral vision didn’t help at all. She stared out into the paddocks, hoping against hope that what she was experiencing was all but a dream and that she would eventually wake up in the comfort of her warm cosy bed in the city. Had she woken from one nightmare only to wake up in another?

The screeching sound of a crow flying overhead jolted her back to the present and she soon realised that she’d need to find some shade before she succumbed to heatstroke. Scanning the endless paddocks, she soon came to across a slim dirt track amidst thick shrub. Seeing as there was no other relief from the blistering sun, she made a bee-line straight towards it.

The change in temperature was pleasantly immeasurable. Alex glanced around her and found herself amidst a forest of eucalyptus trees. She was so in awe of the sudden transformation of her surroundings that she failed to notice she was in fact moving further away from the road and the ute. She soon found herself lost. Hopelessly lost.

Cursing silently, she looked around the endless rows of trees and vegetation in hope of finding anything that would help her way back towards the main road. Confused, she spun around in an attempt to gain some sort of familiarity amongst her surroundings but failed miserably.

She soon became aware of a faint rumbling of thunder in a distance. It wasn’t overly distinctive but it had an oddly familiar rhythm to it. At first, she thought a storm was brewing but, on closer examination of the clear blue sky above, she concluded that wasn’t likely to happen anytime soon.

Boom. Boom. Boom-boom-boom.

She stopped for a moment, trying to remember where she’d heard it from. Almost on cue, it stopped as well, as if challenging her sanity. Alex thought for a minute then decided on a plan of action. Maybe if she continued forward, the rumbling would re-commence, letting her to analyse its origin again. She took an anticipatory step forward, listening intently.

Nothing.

She took another step. Still nothing. Annoyance slowly raged within her and she gave up, storming ahead in defiance.

Then it came back.

Boom. Boom. Boom-boom-boom.

She didn’t hear it at first because she was too pre- occupied with her premature defeat. Her attention was diverted when she realised the rumbling had gotten louder. Without any logical explanation whatsoever, her annoyance subsided and was replaced with intense curiosity.

‘That sounds very familiar,’ she muttered aloud as she looked around, trying to find its source. ‘Where’s it coming from?’

Unfortunately, the next step she took killed off any opportunity to investigate the sound further. Apart from the natural ambiance of the Australian bush, the silence was deafening. The longer she waited for the sound to return, the longer the silence stretched. Alex eventually moved ahead when she realised the sound wasn’t going to return and, in the process, unwittingly stepped on a twig …


The transformation of her surroundings was instant to say the least. In fact, it was starting to become a bit of a habit. With a blink of an eye, she suddenly found herself amongst thick vegetation and there was a black jacket on the ground. Who did the jacket belong to? She made her way to the base of the tree and picked up the garment in examination. The sheer size of the jacket told her that it wouldn’t have fitted the children anyway. The jacket reminded her of someone she didn’t expect to be in this area of isolation. On hindsight, he probably would’ve captured the magic of the country scenery with his digital single lens reflex camera.

A professional photographer, Murray Parkes wasn’t one to let the beauty of a certain landscape escape his watchful eye. It was one of the things Alex loved so much about him. They had met during one of his photo shoots and it was love at first sight. Alex smiled at the memory and brought the jacket up to her nose, savouring the smell of his aftershave.

‘I wondered where I'd dropped it,’ a very familiar voice greeted her. ‘Thanks.’

Alex looked up and saw the man himself. Where had he materialised from? A tall man, Murray posed a striking figure. On this occasion, he wore military style clothing and sturdy hiking boots which – if Alex had been paying any attention to, she’d have realise that it wasn’t his style of clothing at all. Granted, he certainly had the compact and muscular physique for it but he was a pacifist through and through. She flashed him a dazzling smile and greeted him with a passionate kiss on the lips before handing him back the jacket.

‘I know how much it means to you,’ she told him. ‘I remember you wore it when I first met you.’

‘Yes and I remember how unimpressed you were at the time,’ Murray reminded her, thoughtfully.

It was at this point of the conversation that the dialogue started to go slightly awry – not that either of them were paying much attention to it.

‘Well, what do you expect?’ Alex retaliated. ‘You were tearing across a protected area in that bloody Harley- Davidson of yours.’

Murray gave a lopsided grin.

‘At least you didn't throw it over the cliff. Speaking of which, there's something I want to show you.’

He put on his jacket and began leading her away. Now, she was curious.

‘Really? What?’

‘Words just can't describe it,’ Murray replied cheekily.

‘Sounds ominous.’

‘Come on then ...’

The climb over the ravine was steeper than Alex imagined. She wondered how Murray could be so energetic at this time of the day because she could no longer see him. That wasn’t to say he was no longer there. She could still hear his footsteps and panting ahead of her. She, on the other hand, was beginning to feel as if she had just run a four kilometre marathon and the muscles in her legs and arms were burning with exhaustion. Was she really that unfit? She looked up and wondered where Murray had disappeared to.

‘Murray! Slow down!’ she called in desperation.

He didn’t respond at first, rising Alex’s anxiety levels up a notch. A few seconds later, he re-appeared in front of her, shaking his head with laughter.

‘God, you're really out of shape! And you call yourself a park ranger!’

Without any attempt to help Alex or even register her need for assistance, he continued on his way as if nothing happened. Alex cursed under her breath. Typical men! Always wanting to show they were the greater sex. What exactly was he trying to prove anyway? She shook her head in disbelief and continued to struggle up the ravine. She had only climbed a few meters further when she heard a blood curling scream up ahead. That almost sounded like … No, it couldn’t be, could it?

Suddenly with renewed energy, she scrambled to the top of the ravine and found herself at the cliff edge. She wasn’t even sure how she managed to get there so fast. Without even thinking, she looked down and wished she hadn’t. Murray lay there broken and limp at the bottom on a ledge.
 
Chapter 3

Beth Hasting stared down at the limp and unconscious body of her younger sister amidst frantic chest compression, desperately attempting to bring her back to life. Alex had stopped breathing ten minutes ago and time was of the essence. As a senior first aid instructor, Beth had been trained in basic life support but never, in her eleven years in the profession, had she ever needed to do it on someone she actually loved. Despite the occasional hiccups in their relationship, she loved her baby sister dearly and felt partially responsible for the latter’s invalidity.

‘Come on. Don't die on me, please!’ she pleaded.

Where the hell were the ambulance when she needed them? She’d rung them five minutes ago. Almost as if to answer her question, the front door she had left unlocked opened and the unmistakable sound of a stretcher could be heard wheeling in.

‘Hello?’ a female voice called out.

‘In the kitchen!’

The rattling sound of wheels came closer and Beth looked up to see two paramedics – one male and the other female - dressed in standard green reflective South Australian Ambulance uniforms approaching with stretcher in tow. She completed her last round of chest compressions then stepped back to allow the paramedics to fully access her invalid sister which wasn’t easy given the size of the kitchen.

Beth and Alex lived in a small rented apartment in the middle of Adelaide’s Central Business District. The kitchen they were currently in was small and cluttered, separated from an equally sized dining area by a thin bar. In fact, there wasn’t much space with the four of them in the kitchen – especially with Alex sprawled out inelegantly on the ground. It was the middle of the day. The smell of spaghetti bolognaise lingered in the air and an unwashed saucepan was left soaking in a sink full of soapy water. Not that either paramedic took much notice.

‘What happened?’ the female paramedic asked as her partner unstrapped the big green medical bag they had on the stretcher and took out a bag valve mask.

They then both took their positions next to Alex. Beth faltered slightly. She had to make sure what she told them actually made sense, despite her own distress at the situation.

‘I ... I don't know. I walk in and just found her like this,’ Beth stammered. ‘She's going to be okay, right?’

Did that sound convincing enough? The male paramedic looked up and saw the table at which Alex and Beth had been eating before the former’s collapse. It had been set for two. It was clear that there was some residue of tomato juice in one glass.

‘Who was she with?’ he asked, throwing Beth slightly off-guard.

‘What do you mean?’

‘The table …’ was the prompt.

Beth looked towards the table and realised what he was referring to. She said the first thing that came to her mind – which didn’t necessarily make sense.

‘Oh, she does that for us everyday,’ she replied dismissively then became annoyed at the line of questioning. ‘Look, what difference does it make anyway?’

The paramedic looked at her oddly and was about to say something when his partner interrupted, shaking her head in concern.

‘I can’t find a pulse.’

Whatever the paramedic was going to say to Beth had to be placed on hold because Alex’s predicament was far more important.

‘I'll pump, you bag.’

‘Right. When you're ready ...’ her partner decided, unclipping his CB radio and placing it on the lino floor.

He then placed the bag valve mask over Alex’s nose and mouth, creating a prefect seal before squeezing the flexible air chamber and releasing it again. This in turn breathed for Alex when she couldn’t do it herself.

Beth watched nervously as the paramedics worked their magic on her sister, tapping her fingers rhythmically on the bar table.

Tap. Tap. Tap-tap-tap.

It was a habit she had unwittingly picked up whenever she was nervous. It soon dawned on her that her own reply to the male paramedic may trigger suspicions regarding the cause of Alex’s collapse and she looked around discreetly to make sure there was no evidence that would incriminate her in anyway. After all, her reaction to the paramedic’s innocent query was almost enough to ask more questions. Thankfully, both of them were now concentrating on stabilizing Alex’s condition to take much notice of Beth’s body language. Presently, the female paramedic felt for a carotid pulse and gave a sigh of relief but her face was still wrought with worry.

‘I’ve got a pulse but she’s still not breathing.’

The CB radio on the ground suddenly came to life but Beth’s attention was elsewhere.

‘What’s her name?’ The female paramedic asked.

‘Huh?’ was the distracted reply before Beth realised she was talking to her. ‘Oh, Alex.’

The female paramedic nodded slightly and bend down towards Alex while her partner continued to assist Alex in her breathing with the bag valve mask.

‘Alex, we’re just going to take you to the hospital to get you sorted out.’



Claudia Golding looked down at the unconscious fragile figure in front of her and gave an inward sigh. She had always wanted to be a nurse. Growing up in the 1960s Manchester in the United Kingdom, much of her influences in her future profession stemmed from her mother who had been a military nurse during the second world war. She migrated to Australia in the early 1980s and had not looked back.

The reports from the paramedics had not been good. She couldn’t fathom how such a healthy young woman could end up with breathing difficulties and heart problems despite not being on any medication or having eating or drunk anything out of the ordinary. As she took note of the readings coming from both Alex’s ventilator machine and heart monitor, the doctor in residence James Carver arrived to assess the latter’s progress.

‘Claudia, how is she?’ he began.

‘Still unresponsive,’ Claudia replied, enigmatically.

‘Pulse weak and irregular. BP 85 over 60. Oxygen level at 94%. Pupils are bilateral fixed and dilated. Coma scale at 3. The monitors are showing signs of heart arrhythmia. She’s lucky the ambulance got to her when they did.’

James just nodded grimly. He didn’t like the sound of that at all. He took out a small hammer from the depths of his coat pocket and made his way to Alex’s bedside.

‘Alex, I'm just going to test your reflexes using the sole of your left foot,’ he advised. ‘Ready?’

He watched Alex for any reaction but none was forthcoming. Not that he expected any voluntary moment from her. As for reflexes, the real test was yet to come. Ever so gently, he stroked the end of the hammer handle against the sole of Alex’s foot – it jerked.

‘Well, at least they still work,’ he decided. ‘Okay, give her the standard 1mg IV of adrenaline. Lets see if we can stabilise her heart again. I’ll go and have a word with her sister.’

With that, he left Alex in Claudia’s capable hands and made his way out of the unit into the corridor where Beth was waiting patiently on one of the seats. She looked up at him and stood up to greet him.

‘How is she?’ was her first question.

James just sighed. He hated delivering bad news to family members – especially when they were expecting more than he could deliver.

‘It’s not looking good,’ he told her sympathetically.

‘We’ve had to put her on a ventilator. We’re running a series of tests on her so it’ll be a waiting game. At this stage, she’ll be in a coma for a while.’

At the back of her mind, Beth had expected that to be the case but she didn’t want to admit it.

‘Can I see her?’ was all she asked.

‘Not just yet. She’s still very unstable.’ There was a slight pause. ‘Was there anyone you would like us to contact for you? Your parents perhaps?’

Parents? That brought reality a little closer to home than Beth would have like. She hadn’t even thought of the consequences of their mother find out about this. Still, she managed to remain calm in the line of questioning.

‘No, it’s okay. Mum’s due back from holidays in a week,’ she responded but her anxiety eventually reared its head. ‘I can’t let her see Alex like this. She’ll be guttered!’

James could tell that the stress was starting to get to the woman in front of him.

‘You look exhausted. It must’ve been a very emotional day for you,’ he told her. ‘Why don’t you go home and get some rest? We’ll contact you when she has stabilised.’
 
Chapter 4


It had been nearly five hours since Alex had been admitted into the intensive care unit at the Lion Heart Hospital. Both Claudia and her partner, Gareth Michaels, sat in their respective seats within the small nurses’ station. Claudia was busy writing up the progress note for Alex while Gareth scrolled through the computer screen he was reading.

‘Well, we have the initial blood test results back,’ Gareth told her. ‘She had alcohol reading of .07 but that shouldn’t be enough to cause any major issues.’

‘I don’t really understand it,’ Claudia frowned. ‘Her sister said she didn’t have any heart problems so she shouldn’t be having arrhythmia.’

‘Maybe she accidentally ingested something she shouldn’t have,’ her colleague speculated. ‘If that’s the case, this is either a case of attempted suicide or attempted murder.’

‘Don’t even go there. We’re not here to judge anyone. Lets just wait until the toxicology report comes back.’

Gareth was about to say something when Alex’s heart monitor started to alarm.

‘I’ll go,’ Claudia volunteered and made her way to Alex’s bed.

Looking up at her patient’s monitor, she noticed the blood pressure was much higher than usually and decided to test her pupil reaction. It was here that her concerns were raised significantly.

‘Gareth,’ she called out. ‘We’re going to need James here again.’

‘What’s wrong?’ was the question as Gareth made his way to the bed.

‘Her pupils aren’t reacting and her BP is slowly increasing.’

Gareth raised his eyebrows. This could mean one of several scenarios but brain swelling was the most likely for Alex’s current condition.

‘Her heart rate’s dropping as well which means she might have increased ICP. You better give her some Mannitol. I’ll call James.’


‘Can she actually hear us?’

There were certain objects that belonged to the natural exhibition of a musky ancient cave. Rock and brown dirt blended in perfectly with the environment. A CB radio, however, did not. As soon as Alex registered the voice, she opened her eyes and looked at the radio with intense curiosity. Was she still dreaming or did she actually hear Beth’s voice coming from it? There was a short silence.

‘No one knows for sure but we do know that the hearing is usually the last to go.’

Alex recognised that voice somewhere. It was the nurse who had been talking to Beth in her previous dream. What was her name? Claudia … Alex stared at the radio in wonder. Claudia’s voice was coming from it too. Did that mean …?

‘She just looks so vulnerable lying there ...,’ Beth’s soft voice continued.

Alex’s heart almost missed a beat as she scrambled excitedly for the radio. If she could just get their attention, maybe she can work out what was happening to her and get out of here. With shaking hands, she activated the radio and spoke into it, hopefully.

‘Beth? 'That you?’

The voices did continued in conversation without any indication that she had heard her but they were no longer coming from the radio, instead resonating around the echoing cave. It was all very confusing.

‘There is some good news,’ Claudia continued. ‘Her pulse is still strong so there's a very high chance she can still hear you. The best thing you can do for her now is talk to her.’

Good news for whom? Alex thought distastefully. What’s going on?

Alex slowly put down the radio and looked around the cave, listening intently. The whole thing was getting a little too weird for her liking and she longed to just get out of there in one piece.

‘Do we know what happened? I mean, how she ended up like this?’ Beth asked, curiously.

Alex had had enough. After all, there wasn’t anything stopping her from leaving, was there? She got up and ran to the month of the cave. There was something odd about the mouth. Normally, the mouth of a cave led out to a path or clearing of some description but this one didn’t. Alex stopped at the mouth and looked down, realising nearly too late that there was no ground following the cave mouth but a mountain’s cliff edge. If her heart wasn’t beating as fast as a drum before, it certainly was now. Saying she hated heights was an understatement and she was on the verge of hyperventilating. She slowly stepped back in terror with the sudden realisation that she was trapped.

‘Just get me out! Please!’ She screamed, hoping that someone – anyone – would hear her.

‘We found some toxins in her body. Do you know what she ate before she collapsed?’ was Claudia’s query.

Now, that got her attention and she needed a moment to think what they were talking about. What did Claudia mean by “collapsed”?

‘Toxins? What toxins?’

There was a short pause before Beth responded.

‘I made her some spaghetti before going out to hang the washing,’ she said then continued in haste. ‘But I made it the way I always have.’


There was something very unsettling about seeing a loved one hooked up to a mechanical ventilator and heart monitor and being observed around-the-clock by trained medical staff – especially if the loved one was someone much younger than you who still had their whole life in front of them.

Beth was usually a confident woman who took life with both hands and just lived it to the fullest. At thirty- eight, she wasn’t one to let lost opportunities let her down. In fact, she always made sure that they were never lost in the first place. However, seeing Alex lying in a hospital bed at the intensive care unit stopped her in her tracks. Alex had always been the weaker of the two - not least because of her disability – and Beth felt obliged to care for her. Alex’s well-being, for the majority of her life, had been her responsibility and she was half terrified that their formidable mother would find out what had happened.

Debra was currently on holiday in the United Kingdom visiting her sister and was due back within a week. Beth knew their mother had certain expectations during her absence, one of which actually involved keeping Alex alive when she returned home. While Beth was a fairly strong individual, their mother never failed to make her feel inadequate at the most inopportune moment. It was something in the latter’s personality that demanded respect and gratitude but Beth couldn’t quite work out what it was.

Beth stared numbly at the fragile figure in front of her. Alex’s pale face reminded her of a delicate porcelain doll which needed to be handle with care whenever touched. That in itself wasn’t far from the reality of the present situation.

Claudia, an elegant older woman in her late forties, was busy injecting some antibiotics into Alex’s intravenous line. Presently, she looked up and noticed Beth’s anxiety. She gave her a sympathetic smile, taking note of the unease of having a loved one in such a predicament.

‘Hey, it's okay,’ she assured her in a distinctive British accent. ‘I'm not trying to lay blame on anyone. I'm just trying to help you work out what happened.’

Beth just smiled sheepishly, partly in guilt and partly in uncertainty. Claudia looked up at her thoughtfully. Maybe time to try another tact – alleviate any further anxiety.

‘So, what does she do? For a living?’ she offered, conversationally.

‘Um ... she's a model. For posters and catalogues and stuff ... Her eyesight's not the best,’ Beth wondered where the conversation was heading.

She didn’t get a chance to find out though because a heart monitor went off elsewhere in the unit which Claudia had to attend. The registered nurse made her apologies and informed Alex she would be back with some medication. With that, she disappeared around the corner, leaving Beth alone with her sister. It took Beth some time to gain enough courage to take a seat next to the bed. Without even realising it, she began tapping on the bedside railing.

Tap. Tap. Tap-tap-tap.

‘I don't really know what to say,’ she told Alex, meekly.

‘It just feels so weird talking to you but not knowing if you can actually hear.’

In fact, the whole thing felt utterly ridiculous. Who knew if Alex could actually hear her? For all Beth knew, she could be completely wasting her breath. All the medical professionals had done was speculate that a comatose person could hear them but there was no actual evidence that it was even true. Even if there was, most people who woke from coma usually forgot what had been said to them anyway. Besides, what was the point of talking to someone if they couldn’t even reply?

It was like talking to a brick wall. The longer Beth sat there, the more guilty she felt about the whole thing. She knew exactly why Alex was in the situation and there was nothing she could do to reverse it. She instinctively looked at away.

‘It was a really, really stupid thing to do,’ she admitted.

‘You know I don't usually do things on a whim. I don't know what came over me. It just ... happened.’

She looked back at her unresponsive sister as if to expect some form of forgiveness from her. Of course, Alex didn’t move an inch and Beth started to become slightly desperate.

‘Don't die on me,’ she pleaded sincerely. ‘Please? I feel really awful about this. You have to believe me.’

To a surprise, a reaction was registered but it wasn’t entirely the type she was expecting. Alex’s body started to twitch and her unfocussed eyes slowly opened. Beth watched her closely.

‘Alex?’

The heart monitor alarmed making her jump. As a general rule, Beth didn’t like the sound of alarms and this one was no exception – especially when it was directly associated with her sister. Her nervousness turned to fear when the nurse returned and glanced at the monitor just as Alex’s invalid body stiffened.

‘Can you hear me?’ she asked with baited breath.

Then without warning, Alex started convulsing. Within ten seconds of the alarm, Claudia had returned to her bedside.

‘It's okay,’ Claudia assured her as she silenced the alarm. ‘I'm just going to give you some valium to relax those muscles.’

She then proceeded to fill a nearby syringe with fluid before attempting to inject it into Alex's intravenous line. Unfortunately, the severity of Alex’s convulsions made it virtually impossible to access the line without help.

‘Gareth! I need a hand here!’ she called out as the ventilator started to alarm, causing her colleague to join her by the bed. ‘She’s moving too much. I can’t get a clear shot.’

After some effort on both nurses’ part, Alex eventually relaxed and her eyes closed once more, as she returned to her unconscious state.

‘I’ll go write it up,’ Gareth informed his partner and returned to the nurses’ station.

‘That’s it. Just try and sleep it off for now,’ Claudia assured Alex gently, stroking her hair.

Beth, who had been watching the situation unfold in silent horror, finally found enough courage to voice her concern.

‘What just happened?’

‘She suffered a severe seizure, possibly from the brain swelling,’ Claudia informed her, taking down a few notes on Alex’s progress chart. ‘She’s not out of the woods yet but we’ll need to keep a close eye on her.’

Beep. Beep. Beep-beep-beep.

Claudia looked up at Beth who was taking out her phone from her trouser pocket in annoyance. Flipping open the casing, she read the message in dismay. She was already late for work.

‘Oh, crap ...’ Beth stood up and gently stroked Alex’s golden hair. ‘Hey, I gotta go to work but I'll be back later, okay?’

She stood there for a moment, staring blankly at Alex. She had lost the momentum of the conversation she had before the alarm went off. She couldn’t very well continue it in front of Claudia without the nurse making any assumptions about her. She could feel Claudia’s eyes boring into her and, suddenly uncomfortable, hastily made her exit.


It had been three hours since Beth had left the hospital. She was now seated behind the desk in her office at work, feeling utterly insignificant. Given the events surrounding Alex’s condition, it was fair to say that Beth’s concentration had dwindled somewhat and it didn’t help that she actually had to teach the chest compressions to her students. In fact, she had faltered so badly at that stage that someone else had to replace her for that section of the class. After all, she had put theory to practice on her own sister and going through the motions in front of a group of prefect strangers was a little too close to home.

‘What the hell happened out there?’

Beth just groaned. She just didn’t feel like confronting her boss about her what she’d just gone through again. It was embarrassing enough as it was.

‘Hank, please!’ she responded, looking up at him. ‘I know I stuffed up so can we just leave it at that?’

Hank Meyers was leaning against her desk, perplexed by her reaction. Beth was one of his more dedicated workers and he couldn’t understand what had come over her.

‘Come on, Beth,’ the American coaxed. ‘Help me understand. You did great with the theory but when it came to the CPR ...’

Beth hung her head. There wasn’t anything she could really say that didn’t involve telling Hank what had actually happened.

‘I'm sorry.’

‘Well, I hope for your sake the students don't demand a refund. We're in enough trouble as it is.’

Beth didn’t say anything. Hank looked straight at her, searching. She wasn’t usually like this.

‘You can tell me, you know,’ he told her but Beth just shook her head.

‘I can't. It's ... personal.’

Hank waited for a moment, hoping that Beth would open up to him. Nothing came. He gave up. Sometimes trying to get Beth to talk was like trying to get blood out of a stone.

‘Okay, I won't push you but I do need you to be on the ball here. Especially with the meeting tomorrow. You will –‘ he asked, uncertainly.

He had every right to be. The company was in financial crisis and everyone was counting on her to negotiate a deal with their creditors. Beth knew that and just nodded her head impatiently.

‘Yes, I'll be there.’ There was a slight pause. ‘Look, I'm sorry. Maybe I just need a good night's sleep.’

Hank appraised her slightly. He did sympathize with her, knowing how much pressure she’d been under lately.

‘Try not to overdo it, okay?’ he told her softly.

Beth just nodded absentmindedly, thankful for the retreat. Her glance drifted to the framed photograph of Alex, herself and their parents beside her work computer. Beth remembered the day well. It had been taken approximately last year during the Christmas and New years period. The memory still fresh in her mind, she could almost feel the fresh sea breeze caressing her face. It was one the happier moments in her life.

Hank couldn’t help but notice Beth’s concentration had wavered. He followed her glance towards the photograph. He didn’t know the beaches of Adelaide very well yet, having only just migrated to Australia from California five months prior. The jetty in the photograph, however, looked vaguely familiar.

‘Glenelg?’ he hazarded a guess.

‘Huh?’ Beth blinked, quickly returning to the present.’ Oh, yeah. It was taken a few months ago before Dad died.’

It had been on Alex’s insistence that they invite their mother to spend the day with them. Alex might have been the weaker of the two but, when she set her mind on something, there was little anyone could do to change it and their father was no exception. Beth doubted Alex had realised just how far their parents had drifted apart over the years but she knew her younger sister had always been their favourite and would do anything for her. Beth often felt cheated by their parents but knew Alex’s love for her was paramount which provide some comfort to her.

‘It’s such a beautiful place,’ she sighed, pushing her parents’ rejection to the back of her mind and concentrating purely on the tranquillity of the beach.

‘Enough to go take your mind off things for a while?’ Hank queried.

Beth just gave a sad smile.

‘You could say that.’

She would probably need more than just a sea-change to take her mind off what she was going through but the idea was a good start nonetheless.

‘Look, why don’t you take the rest of the day off?’ Hank decided. ‘I’ll take care of things here.

Beth looked at him curiously but his facial expression left no room for discussion.

‘Take a trip down there to clear your mind if you think it’ll help,’ he continued. ‘But I don’t want to see you back here until tomorrow.’

Beth gave a grateful smile and nodded. She knew she could always count on Hank to look after her well-being.
 
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