by Jamie Davis
“Uh, Ashley?” He called.
“What, Sweetie?” She answered from upstairs. “My purse is down there on the floor near my suitcase I think. Can’t you find it.”
“I found it,” Dean said. “I’m talking about the guests we have out front.” He heard her walk across the wooden floor above to the front windows. Dean watched as the gathering forms outside all looked up suddenly, and one smaller figure in the group, a child he thought, pointed up to where Ashley must be looking out the window.
“Oh, I see,” He heard her say. “I’ll be right down.” He waited in his shorts, standing there watching the crowd of about fifteen outside. They weren’t doing anything, just standing there watching the house. It was kind of creepy. He turned as he heard Ashley come down the stairs. She was putting her hair up in a ponytail again, and she had pulled on her jeans and her t-shirt though she hadn’t put on her shoes. She tossed Dean his t-shirt and pants.
“Here,” She said. “Get dressed and we can go out. This must be a reception from the local Unusual community. I wasn’t sure who all lived up here, but they are likely traditionalists, so leave the talking to me.”
“Is everything ok?” Dean asked as he pulled on his jeans and slipped his t-shirt over his head.
“Oh, it’s fine,” She reassured him. “They’re most likely the Dryads and Naiads of this valley, the forest and water nymphs, and based on their simple clothes, have probably been living up here in these mountains for hundreds of years. They must’ve seen us arrive, and I didn’t mask my aura, so they probably recognized me right away. I just need to talk to them and introduce you. That’s all.” She opened the door as he finished zipping up his pants. “Shall we?”
Dean nodded and followed her out onto the porch of the small cabin. When they emerged, the group in front of them bowed. A young girl came forward with a bundle of fresh-picked wildflowers. She handed them to Ashley, her eyes wide and then scampered back to stand behind a woman who must be her mother. A man next to the woman stepped forward.
“Greetings, Eldara,” he said. “I am called Thomas. We are honored with your presence among us. Please tell us the reason for your visit and we will endeavor to assist you in your mission.”
Dean watched as Ashley smiled and raised the bundle of flowers to her face, inhaling the fragrance. “My mission here is to enjoy the peace of your forest, vale and lake,” She said, looking around at the trees surrounding the cabin. “It is truly a beautiful place. You are all to be commended for your excellent stewardship.”
The group bowed. Dean realized they must be in awe of having a being of their myths among them. He wished he could see the light, or the halo, or whatever it was that supposedly surrounded her. It must be beautiful.
The little girl tugged on her mother’s dress, “Will she tend to Zora, Mama?” She looked from her mother to Ashley.
“Hush, child,” her mother said and then returned her attention to the Eldara standing in front of them. “I apologize for the child’s impertinence, Eldara. She does not yet know her place.”
“There is no need for an apology,” Ashley said kindly. “Who is Zora? If there is something I can do to help, I will try.”
The dryad woman bowed. “She is my eldest daughter, Eldara. She was caught as a tree was felled by humans. Her injuries are severe.”
“Wait here,” Ashley said to the group. “I will go with you to see her and do what I can to help her.” She turned to Dean and gestured for him to follow her back to the cabin as the group waited under the trees outside. Once inside she spoke.
“Dean look upstairs and see if you can find a first aid or emergency kit. This is the vacation home of an ER nurse, so I’m sure she has stocked up on some supplies somewhere. I’ll look down here.” She started towards the bathroom under the stairs while Dean headed up to the bedroom. He arrived at the top of the stairs to what was essentially a loft above the first floor of the small cabin. There was a small built-in closet against the far wall, and he checked there first. It was empty other than coat hanger hanging on the rod, and a few spare blankets on the shelf inside. He turned and checked under the queen sized bed in the center of the room, as well as in the chest at the foot of the bed. Other than a few more blankets, a pillow, and some DVDs, there was nothing.
“I found the first-aid kit!” Ashley called upstairs. Dean came back down.
“There was nothing upstairs but a few blankets and a spare pillow,” Dean said as he returned to the first floor.
“Erin is an old trauma nurse,” Ashley said holding up a zippered gym bag. “I knew she would have squirreled away a disaster kit, or medical supplies of some kind. Everything we will likely need is in here. Come on.”
Dean followed her out the door as she returned to the group of Unusuals clustered in front of the cabin. She walked up to the little girl still holding onto her mother’s skirts and knelt down to the girl’s level.
“Will you and your mommy take me to see your sister?” Ashely asked. “My friend and I will do what we can for her, if it is within our power.”
The little girl curtsied, smiled and grabbed Ashley’s hand, starting to pull her off into the forest away from the lake. Dean followed as the group of Unusuals gathered around them as they walked through the woods down a small path Dean could hardly see as the sun started to set. He was a city boy and was sure he would get lost out here on his own, so he stayed close to Ashley and the little girl as they hurried off down the trail. He couldn’t help but think this was the way every horror movie started.
After about a twenty minute walk, they arrived at a shack set up against a hill. As they got closer, Dean realized it was built into the hill itself. The moss had grown over the wooden roof shingles, and vines hung down the sides of the small building’s facade. He would not even have noticed it if he were hiking nearby.
“Is your sister inside?” Ashley asked as they approached.
“Yes, Eldara,” The little girl said. “Zora tried to stop the men from cutting the tree down. They pushed her away, and she fell as a limb dropped from above. It struck her on the legs. The men just left her there and ran away when she was hurt.”
“We tried to help her ourselves, Eldara, but our healers are not up to the task to save her I fear,” The mother said, tears in her eyes. “Will you try to do something?”
“Of course,” Ashely said. “My friend is a healer from Elk City to the East. He and I have worked together before. May I bring him with me inside to see your daughter?”
The mother looked at Dean skeptically, and the man who had first addressed them spoke up.
“It was a human who did this to her,” He said angrily. “They have never helped us before, why would one of their kind help us now?”
“Have you heard of the tattooed ones?” Ashley asked. “The new group of humans who heal rather than harm?”
The man nodded.
“Show them your hand, Dean,” Ashley said. “The stamp is still fresh enough.”
Dean held out his right hand showing the back of his hand to the gathered Unusuals. He turned and held his hand up with his palm toward his face the back of his hand outward so all could see the Station U stamp with the ultraviolet ink that marked him as a paramedic for the Unusual community. There was a gasp from the crowd.
“So it is true,” The man said. “I had not believed it, but had heard the rumors of the human healers who moved among our kind, helping the sick and injured.”
“It is true,” Ashely said. “He may be able to help me tend to Zora if you let him.”
The Unusual man nodded his assent and Dean took the bag from Ashley as she led him inside the shack’s rickety door. It was dark inside with only the light of a flickering oil lamp shining on a table in the center of the room. Zora’s mother picked up the lantern and led them back a hallway that Dean realized was cut back into the hill. It led to a series of rooms. At one doorway, the woman pushed open a door, and Ashely entered the dimly lit room, followed closely by Dean.
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There was another lantern on a small table and an old wooden bed with what looked like a straw mattress across the lattice of ropes criss-crossing the bed’s frame to hold the mattress up. There was a sickly sweet smell of rot in the room, and he saw the blackened crust of blood on the bandaged legs of the teen-aged girl huddled on the bed. She moaned quietly but didn’t look up as they entered. She seemed oblivious to their presence. He could tell by looking at her that she was in bad shape. Ashley knelt down beside her as she opened the bag Dean handed her. She pulled out a blood-pressure cuff and stethoscope.
“Dean,” Ashley said. “Put on some gloves. There are some in the kit, in a zipper baggie. Peel back those bandages and see what the injuries to her legs look like. We need to clean her up at the very least.” The nurse wrapped the blood pressure cuff around the girl’s arm and laid the stethoscope’s bell against her arm below it as she pumped up the cuff.
Dean found the gloves in the bag and noticed the abundance of trauma supplies inside including IV bags and tubing and a suture kit. He pulled on the gloves and started to peel back the bandages from the leg closest to him. The injury was high on the legs at the mid-thigh, as if something had come down across both of them simultaneously. He felt the heat coming off the wound through his gloves. The girl’s skin was hot to the touch. She was septic, he guessed. A massive infection from the wounds was coursing through her system.
The more he unwrapped, the worse the smell got in the room, as the putrid wound was exposed. He found a similar wound on the other leg. Whatever had struck the legs, whether a tree branch or the tree itself, it had packed significant force. Both femurs were broken and had cut through the skin from the inside. The thigh bones had been reset by someone, but the wounds had become infected and had putrified. Although he had never seen gangrene before, he had seen photos in school and on his Figure1 medical mobile app. The skin was blackened around the wounds. There was a flow of yellow puss from the openings in the skin and red streaks stretched up under the skin towards the girl’s groin. This was bad. He wasn’t sure if a full trauma team could save her legs at this point. They might not have been able to even save her life.
Ashley finished taking her vital signs and was grim-faced as she, too, assessed the wounds. Dean caught her eye and quirked an eyebrow upward. “What do you think?” He whispered.
“I think she needs a lot of help, and I’m not sure she would make it all the way back to Elk City if we moved her,” Ashley replied. “She’s septic. Her blood pressure is so low I can’t read it. Her respirations are rapid and shallow, the carotid pulse is rapid and thready, and her temp is over 105° Fahrenheit.”
“I can start an IV and try to get her pressure up with fluids, but she needs antibiotics, Ashley,” Dean said.
“I know, but maybe,” She said, pausing as she dug in the bag, “Yes!” the nurse exclaimed. She pulled out a vial of powder and a small bag of fluid taped together. “Erin, you’re a paranoid genius!”
“What is it?” Dean asked.
“A broad spectrum antibiotic in powdered form,” She explained. “It would last virtually forever and just needs to be reconstituted with sterile water. Erin, my friend, packed this bag with things that would last. I’ll start working on this, you get the IV started and get her some fluids.”
Dean turned back to the bag of supplies and pulled out a one-liter bag of normal saline solution, tubing, and an IV catheter needle. He assembled the bag and tubing, handing it off to Zora’s mother telling her to hold it up so the fluid would drain through the tubing. He cleared all the air out of the tube and then turned to start the IV with the needle. The girl’s veins were flat because of her sepsis and dehydration, but he was able to find one and inserted the needle, getting a small flash of blood to show he had connected. He attached the tubing to the plastic catheter hub and started the fluids flowing.
Ashely was still mixing the antibiotic, so he turned to see what he could do next. He decided to work at cleaning out the wounds. He got a small bottle of sterile saline and some four by four gauze pads out of the supply bag and started irrigating the wound and cleaning out the puss and infection as best he could. He had seen a wound care nurse at work in one of his hospital rotations and knew that packing the wound with damp sterile gauze would help the opening heal more cleanly. He opened another pack of sterile gauze pads and poured the remainder of the sterile saline in the plastic packaging wetting down the gauze. He put on a fresh pair of gloves from the bag and then carefully packed the wound from the bottom up. He covered the wound with some more sterile gauze dressings and wrapped a new fresh bandage around it to hold the packing and dressings in place over the wounds on both legs.
His girlfriend had already piggy-backed the small IV antibiotic bag to the tubing of the other, larger saline bag, and the medication was flowing into the girl’s veins now. Ashley looked down at the job Dean had done bandaging the wounds on the legs and nodded in approval.
“Is it going to be enough?” Dean asked her quietly.
“I don’t know,” Ashley responded. She closed her eyes and laid her hands on the girl’s legs over the bandages. He watched her brow furrow in concentration and a light sweat broke out on her head. A gasp sounded from the doorway behind him and from the girl’s mother, still holding the IV bag for her daughter. Dean couldn’t see what they were seeing, but Ashley was doing - something. He watched as the red streaks on the girl’s legs retreated back towards the bandages and disappear underneath them. Zora’s breathing became less ragged and slowed some, too. Whatever his angelic girlfriend was doing, it appeared to be working. Suddenly, Ashley let out a long sigh and sagged to her knees in exhaustion. Dean caught her as she slumped over.
“Hey, are you okay?” He asked in alarm, stroking her hair back from her face. She was flushed and sweaty, as if she had just returned from a workout.
“Wow! I haven’t done that in a while,” She said. “It takes a lot out of me. I think she’ll be alright now. I was able to draw some of the infection out of her wounds. The antibiotic will take care of the rest.” Ashley looked up at him and smiled. “I’m glad you were here. Take me back to the cabin. I need to rest.” She collapsed and fell asleep in his arms.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
Dean needed help to get Ashley back to the cabin. Zora’s father, Enric and another man helped him carry the exhausted Eldara Sister back to the cabin in the woods. Once they got her settled in the bed upstairs, Dean came down to find Anya, Zora’s mother, busy in the kitchen of the large open room that made up the downstairs of the cabin.
“Anya,” Dean said. “Thank you very much, but I can take care of getting dinner together. I think Ashley is going to sleep for a while.”
“It is nothing,” the Dryad woman said with a wave of her hand. “The Eldara Sister used her power to heal my daughter, and I will not have her or her companion left to fend for themselves. You sit and rest yourself, Paramedic Dean.”
He thought it was amusing that she used his job as a title. He looked around and decided to go back upstairs and sit with Ashely. She had looked quite pale when she collapsed in his arms after doing whatever it was she had done to halt the spread of the infection. He pulled a chair next to the bed where she slept, opened a book on his phone’s reader app and started it, occasionally glancing up to check on her. He didn’t know how long he had been sitting there when Anya came up the stairs with a plate of food and a glass of cold beer.
“Paramedic Dean,” She said. “You must eat something to keep up your strength. I made some roast venison with gravy, roasted potatoes and some fresh biscuits.”
Dean’s mouth watered as he smelled the plate of food. She came over and set it down on the bedside table. He thanked the woman, putting his phone away and picking up the plate and a fork.
“I have made a simple broth for the Eldara,” Anya said. “It is on the stove. If she awakens before I return in the morning, simply heat it up to a simmer and then give her some spoonfuls to sip until she ha
s gathered her strength. Our legends say that such healing is taxing for the Eldara. We are very fortunate she chose to use her power to help our Zora.”
“I know Ashley would not have had it any other way,” Dean said. “She always tries to help people.”
“Of course she does,” Anya chuckled. “It is her nature. To do otherwise would be to deny who she is. But it could have drawn her to the other side, healing Zora when she was so close to death. I would have not wanted her to send herself away on our behalf when she may have other, more important tasks here to accomplish.”
Dean was confused. “I’m sorry,” He said, seeking clarification. “What do you mean send her away and the ‘other side?’ Was she in some sort of danger?”
Anya seemed confused. “Paramedic Dean, I do not understand,” She said. “You are the companion of an Eldara, a most honored position, and you do not understand such things?”
Dean shook his head. “I’m sorry, but I do not. Ashely and I are friends. Perhaps more than that now, but she has never told me of her powers, or of any danger in using them.”
Anya bit her lower lip in consternation. “I have overstepped myself, I fear. It is not my place to explain such things to you. Perhaps you are not her companion, but a protected one instead. You must ask her for the explanation.” She turned to go back downstairs. “Do not forget the broth I made. I will return in the morning. One of the men will remain outside during the night should you need anything. Goodbye, Paramedic Dean.”
Dean watched as the woman proceeded down the stairs then turned his gaze to Ashley. What had she done back there in the shack? Had it put her at risk for — something bad to happen to her? He settled in to watch over her tonight while she rested. He took her pulse and counted her respirations while he sat there. She seemed fine from the aspect of her vital signs, but she barely stirred when he lifted her wrist to check the heart rate. She was in a very deep sleep, at least he hoped it was just sleep. The night passed slowly around him as he watched her on the bed.