rainbowmods (
rainbowmods) wrote in
rainbowlounge2013-09-06 01:11 pm
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The Hospital
The hospital is sterile and sprawling, its hallways and patient rooms painted a glaring white. The floor is made of something hard and shining, and the lights are that peculiar kind of flourescent that makes everyone look ill.
The first floor consists of the lobby (painted a sickly green), an emergency room, and several surgery suites, all stocked with cutting-edge, even futuristic, technology and supplies. There is a cafeteria, though the buffet line is empty; the only consumables seem to be stocked in a line of vending machines along one wall. There are no stairs, only elevators, to the upper floors, which all consist of patient rooms: made beds, glazed windows, dying flowers, and the hard plastic orange chairs that are a constant in hospitals.
The whole building smells like antiseptic and death.
((Please mark your healthcare professionals as such, and enjoy!))
The first floor consists of the lobby (painted a sickly green), an emergency room, and several surgery suites, all stocked with cutting-edge, even futuristic, technology and supplies. There is a cafeteria, though the buffet line is empty; the only consumables seem to be stocked in a line of vending machines along one wall. There are no stairs, only elevators, to the upper floors, which all consist of patient rooms: made beds, glazed windows, dying flowers, and the hard plastic orange chairs that are a constant in hospitals.
The whole building smells like antiseptic and death.
((Please mark your healthcare professionals as such, and enjoy!))
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"How old are you?" Brenda asked. "Can you get on that bed for me? Just sit on the edge." She turned to wash her hands and glove.
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
That made two eight-year-olds today who had done something they shouldn't, but eight-year-olds were not exactly known for their levelheadedness and rational thinking. It also meant he probably wouldn't know if he had any medication allergies, so she'd take the least-problematic routes there. "I'm going to get the glass out of your cuts, then clean them, okay?" she said, turning to him.
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"I have to do it myself. My gloves are clean, and I'm going to use tools to get the glass out so neither of us gets cut," she explained. "I just need you to sit as still as you can."
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"You're right in between the ages of my younger kids," Brenda said to distract him. She pulled the stool over and sat down, tweezers in hand, to start picking out the glass. "Zach is six, and Karen is eleven. Their older brother and sister are sixteen."
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"That's okay. How old's Kirana?" She was nearly positive that was his little sister's name, anyway. "Tell me if this starts to hurt too much, all right?"
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"Not with you while you were exploring, I hope?" Brenda asked. As she pulled out slivers of glass, she collected them on a bit of gauze on the bed beside Isshiri. "Or she got out faster than you?"
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Brenda laughed. "Sounds like you might need to take a lesson or two from her," she teased gently.
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"What would you do with a magic sword?" Brenda asked. "Slay an evil dragon?"
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"That's a very sensible approach to dragons," she agreed. "They'd probably rather you fly them than slay them, too. Where would you go on adventures to?"
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"Tell me about where you're from," Brenda suggests. This is going to be a while, between picking out the glass and getting all his various wounds clean, and if he has something to talk about, it should make sitting still more bearable.
Re: Patient: Isshiri
Re: Patient: Isshiri
"Is your whole palace glass?" she asked. "Or are only parts of it?"
Re: Patient: Isshiri