Chameleon Ch 44
“Let me go find a doctor, or a midwife, or someone
else who knows what to do.”
“Don’t you leave me here!”
“All right, I’ll stay. But, I’m… I’m a little
scared here.”
“You is scared? Of what?!” A wave of heat from
embarrassment flushed on his face like a red banner.
“Calm down, Love, don’t use your energy yelling at
me! I’ve… I just don’t know what to do!”
“You can fly star ship! This not that hard!”
“What do you want me to do?!”
“You already done enough! Oh, it’s coming again,”
she groaned, then said something unintelligible in her native language. He
transferred her to the day-bed in the alcove hoping to escape. No, he couldn’t
escape. “Go get paper or rugs or towels. I don’t want to ruin poor Jake’s
furniture!” she hissed.
Tom didn’t want to think what she meant by that,
but he scrambled for what she asked. He could hear her panting through the
contraction, helpless to do anything about it.
“You’re doing fine, Love.”
“Shut up! I need think.” Tom took a couple of deep
breaths himself and focused on Rianya. They both looked down at the same time.
A small puddle of mostly clear fluid grew on the floor. Even in the dim light
of the fire, however, he could make out some streaks of blood. He hated blood.
Blood was never good. Blood made him think of horrible things, of death, and
helplessness, and fainting.
“Get cutters, rope, water,” she demanded. Cutters,
rope, water? What the hell was she thinking? “Now, hurry, please.” Her voice
softened with a shudder, a deep breath, and the end of that contraction.
Tom stopped thinking and tried to just follow
orders. Cutters? What were cutters? Scissors? A knife? And rope – why couldn’t
she be more specific? A long rope or a heavy gauge, and did it have to be jute
or could it be something else? Water: that he could do.
Neptune’s Ocean! He hated shining any kind of
light on female anatomy. That was supposed to be dark, wonderful, and
mysterious, not something functional, medical, and painful. He dashed out the
rear door and found the water supply. He wasn’t sure it was safe to drink in
its raw form. He stoked the embers in the kitchen hearth and fed the flames
with tinder. Before it got out of control, he poured the water into the copper
pot that hung on a hook, swinging the arm inward to heat the water.
He hurried back to see how Rianya was faring. She
was relatively calm, sitting flat on the floor but leaning heavily on the wall,
her eyes gently shut, her face relaxed. He let out a sigh he didn’t know he was
holding, and inhaled with a shudder.
“Are you okay?”
“No! I’m having a baby, all by myself. No shaman,
no mother, no sister, not even Dr. Clarke! Just a scared man! Did you get the
stuff?”
“Water, I’m heating it. Cutters and rope?” She
opened her eyes now.
“Yes.” He was afraid to ask why. When he thought
hard enough, he realized he’d only ever felt this petrified once in his entire
life, watching a house burn while he did nothing. That next morning, he vowed
he would never let fear stop him from doing what was right, what was necessary
to do, even if it meant his own life. And he never had. Fear was one of those
demons to crush, and when it arose, the fire filled his eyes and his adrenaline
boiled.
And this wouldn’t cost him his life in any way.
Maybe two other lives, but not his own. Maybe those two other lives were more
precious to him than his own, and screwing this up wasn’t an option.
“What’s it for?” he said with the enthusiasm of a
mouse facing a snap trap. Her face began to pinch inward.
“The life line. We have to …” she scrunched her
face and grabbed a hold of her abdomen. She blew a few breaths through her
mouth. The next words came out in her first language. “You need cut the blood
cord away. The rope is tourniquet, or baby bleed to die.”
Tom only understood about half of that, the words
‘blood’, ‘cut’, and ‘die’. He could hear Dr. Clarke’s voice, her unique, authoritative
accent, admonishing him when Zalara was born. ‘Man up! You can crash a
spaceship but a little blood makes you faint? Put it in perspective, Captain!’.
In the dark, Tom rummaged through baskets in the
kitchen and took the sharpest knife available. In the bedroom where the girls lay
sleeping, he found a hefty rope, a belt from the waist of one of Quinaal’s
gowns, of all things. A couple of large tunics, folded and on the shelf, looked
older, and worn out. He yanked one down and held it up. From its size, he had
no doubt it had belonged to Quinaal’s husband, not Jake.
He crammed two tunics under his arm and went back
to Rianya. Before she could ask, he went back for the water and returned,
setting the copper vessel on the stone hearth.
“Good. Now, get away until I call you. No, don’t
go, don’t leave me here alone.” She reached out and grasped his hand, twisting
to one side, and then the other, her teeth clamped together. Her writhing hurt
Tom near as much as it hurt her, in that he could do nothing about it.
Somewhere in the depths of his soul he wanted to run, fast, from the impending
chamber of horror.
The thought was primal, and shameful. Like a
scandalous dream, it was involuntary, humiliating that he considered, even
unconsciously, abandoning Rianya because of his own cowardice. He was a reluctant,
and captive, witness to the pain of life coming into existence.
“Maybe I should find some of the purple tea, if it
helps labor, like Mosi says.” He wiped sweat from his own brows.
“Jake won’t have any here. And you’re not going
anywhere.” She shook and gripped his hand, her small bones and lithe fingers
absurdly powerful. “Ooooohhhhaaaaaahh!” she bellowed. “I can’t do this. I’m
done. I’m out of energy. I’m going to die.” He searched the room and snagged a
small back pillow from a chair, shoving it into her hand. She wrung it into a
perverse shape.
“You’re not going to die. No one dies from having
a baby.”
“Yes, they do!” A dull saw ripped at her abdomen. She
crushed his hand again. How could he be this callous, this insensitive, so much
like a Kinnae man that she almost forgot he was human.
“I need a woman, not a man,” she growled. Delirium
set in. She didn’t care anymore. She was compelled, urgently, desperately, to
force that baby out. She heard nothing, saw nothing, just an intolerable need
to squeeze her whole body with every last bit of her strength.
Tom had no idea what to say, or do, or not do. If
he said the wrong thing, she might bite his head off. She might do that anyway.
As it was, she moaned and cried like an animal caught in a trap.
“No, no, you’re not going to die. You can’t. What
would I do without you? Ri’, tell me what to do. I can take instructions.”
“Get this baby out of meeeeeeeeeee! Oh, oh, oh!”
She tried to stand; Tom helped her up. Her legs collapsed and she fell to her
hands and knees. “Nothing, nothing,
there’s nothing you can do!” She moaned, then relaxed just a fraction and took
a breath.
He wanted to scream every time she screamed. He
had no appetite, he didn’t know what time it was, whether the sun was rising or
setting. He soaked one of the tunics in the water and held it to her head,
thinking hard of first aid, never before forgetting so much when faced with an
emergency.
“Mamá! You’re hurting!” Zalara cried softly,
running to her side.
“Lara, go back to bed, Pet,” Tom told her sternly.
“Mamá hurts!”
“Yes, but it’s okay, she’s okay.” He did his best
to shield her view from the insanity with his body, but the girl plowed forward.
“Oh, the baby is coming,” the child said, relief
evident in her voice. “I’ll help you,” she said.
“Pet, you’ll just be underfoot. Go back to bed.”
“It’s okay,” Rianya told him. “She understands.”
“I can hear her. She’s ready.” Rianya nodded, but
Tom only wanted to get her away from the chaos.
“Love, are you sure you want her here?” His heart
nearly beat out of his chest, terrified Zalara would be traumatized for life.
Perhaps he was projecting his own fear on her. Rianya nodded, her eyes squeezed
tight, her jaw clenched shut.
“I’m going to die!” she shrieked, drawing a huge
breath, holding it, and bearing all her energy down for a final, exhaustive
push and a primeval howl.
Rianya groaned raucously. In a sudden rupture of
space and time, Tom found himself on the floor holding a slippery, squirming
baby covered in the most indescribable, gelatinous substance of crimson viscera
he’d never seen before.
“Oh, God!” Tom called out. He grabbed the other
tunic and wrapped the child without dropping her. Still in command mode,
despite the uneasiness, he had a brief lapse resolve.
“Wash the stuff out of her mouth,” Rianya gasped. He
scooped a handful of water on the baby’s face, but she was silent. “Pat her
back, hold her head down a little,” Rianya said. “She should breathe, cry,
something.”
“She’s, um, still... attached,” he said.
“What’s
wrong?” Rianya called from her exhausted place on the floor.
“I don’t know,” Tom muttered. The tiny life was in
his hands. Zalara squirmed in and placed her small forehead on the new baby’s.
“Pet—”
“It’s okay,” she said, and a small cry and a
breath came from the tiny being’s mouth. “She’s really messy. Yuk.” Zalara
wiped her forehead and rubbed her hands on her shirt.
“It’s okay, Lovely, she’s okay, just quiet. She’s
okay.” He wiped the baby’s face with warm water. “Now what?”
“I don’t know, I’m tired. Let me think.” Rianya
lay on the floor, on her side, still breathing hard.
“I should cut this cord, right?”
“Not yet. Take care of baby first, that can wait a
few minutes.” Sweating, he set the baby down, pulled off his own shirt and
picked her up again, setting the tiny being in his lap.
“Can I hold her?” Zalara asked politely, almost in
awe, her emerald eyes sparkling in the firelight.
“Mamá gets her first,” he said, and doing his best
to avoid the slippery slop on the floor, he crawled over a meter and gave
Rianya the little pooh, not sparkling clean but good enough for a ship’s
captain to call a job well done. Zalara danced like a fairy around her father
and got close-up in the baby’s face.
“She’s happy now,” the girl declared on behalf of
the newborn.
Tom sat on the floor, drawing a blanket over
Rianya to cover the things he didn’t want to see again. He tried to breathe and
comprehend what he’d just done without replaying the scene in his mind’s eye.
Zalara had taken a tremendous interest in the little being, imitating Tom’s
warm water routine to clean the petite face while in Rianya’s arms.
“The rest has to come out still,” Rianya reminded
Tom.
“The rest?”
“It takes a few minutes.”
Coming down from an explosion of adrenaline, he
placed a hand on Rianya’s hip, gently patting her. The room went silent.
“You did good, Mylan.” Tom wiped sweat from his
forehead and rolled his eyes skyward. She sucked in a long breath and bore
down, with a just fraction of the force from before. “That was it,” she said.
Tom did not know exactly what ‘it’ was, and he
didn’t want to know, but his curiosity, and duty, compelled him to see what she
was talking about. He shuddered seeing the purple pancake on the floor,
attached to the other end of the baby’s umbilical cord. It quivered, like grape
gelatin, and the pale pink cord trembled.
“Thank Neptune you know more about this than me,”
he said quietly, referring to what looked more like a crime scene than what he imagined
a birth would look like. Reaching the limit of his constitution, he heaved a
small, clear pool on the floor that didn’t make a dent in the grand scheme of
what needed cleaning up. This confirmed his decision to pursue aeronautics instead
of medicine in school.
“I only know from what I did with the town animals
we bred, not a person. Tom?”
“I’m here,” he gurgled.
“Tie the rope a hand-length away from the baby,
and another hand-sized, from that. Tie it hard. Then cut in the middle, not the
baby side.”
“Okay, I can figure this out,” he said under his
breath. Zalara handed him the knife, surprising him with her calm, quiet help.
“Tie it tight, as tight as possible, and make a
knot,” she told him. “A good knot.” A knot. Now that was something he knew how to
do. He’d never have been let out of boot camp if he’d never learned a dozen
different ways to tie a knot.
The thumb-width of living rope felt like rubber.
As he cut through an artery and a vein, more blood spilled over his exposed hands,
and on the floor. Clammy sweat sent a shiver over his body, and his eyes glazed
over like a freshly killed antelope.
“Papá?”
“I’m okay, ‘Lara.” Tom rolled onto his back and
covered his face with his bare arm. It was over. He’d done it. Rianya was falling
asleep, the new baby was making drowsy movements, Zalara was bonding in
silence, and he could almost relax. But he still had to clean up the unpleasant
chaos that remained on the floor of Jake’s home.
His shirt was ruined. The tunics also. He didn’t
even know where to start. He was going to need a little light. He lit a twig
from the fire and lit a fatty wick in the closest lantern. As the light came
up, Tom clearly saw the overwhelming task ahead, the organs, the fluids, and the
red, red blood. Then he heard nothing, everything turned white, and he collapsed.
Men and having babies. When I was in labor, my husband felt sorry for me and said, "I wish I could do this for you." I replied, "No way! This is the one thing a woman can do that a man can't do. It's mine, and I'm going to do it! You just stay with me." Poor guy got a headache and the nurse had to bring him some aspirin. There I was, in labor, and he needed aspirin. Crazy.
ReplyDeleteI found it a little annoying that Jackson was so ignorant about the process of having a baby. Really? He should have known more. But I guess for a guy who never thought he'd get married and have kids, it isn't that surprising.
I've made him especially ignorant because he's always avoided 'girl' issues, and now he gets to face the reality! Don't want him to be a Mary Sue.
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