zomboligist (
zomboligist) wrote in
sixthiterationlogs2017-04-22 05:37 pm
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(no subject)
WHO: Ravi Chakrabarti
WHERE: Hospital
WHEN: April 22
OPEN TO: OTA
WARNINGS: General illness/unhappiness of digestion
STATUS: Open!
Ravi hates everything.
No, that's too kind. Ravi loathes everything with the fires of hell layered upon teenybopper performances and CDC-firing bosses on top of that. Ever since he'd woken up from the morning after the feast, he's felt sort of off. Then, this morning, 'off' became the fiery guts of Dante's circles of hell, at least four through seven. He's trudged to the hospital on the auspices that he might work, but truthfully, as soon as he's arrived, he collapses face down on the nearest bed and manages to groan. Even that ends up hurting his body, peering out through blurry vision at a shape that seems to be coming in the door.
What he hasn't actually noticed is the rash, mainly because he's been so occupied with feeling miserable. He turns onto his back and stares at the too-bright ceiling, squinting as he drapes his arm over his eyes, wishing death upon himself.
"Why?" he complains, searching for something to drink because he doesn't even know what would make him feel better. He doesn't even know what it is, because this has no hallmark of food poisoning and he doesn't think this is a disease that he's seen before. Or maybe it is and he's just too discombobulated to actually tell what's going on.
He stares at the person, squinting and reaching out with a needy hand. "Please tell me you've come to put me out of my misery," he pleads.
WHERE: Hospital
WHEN: April 22
OPEN TO: OTA
WARNINGS: General illness/unhappiness of digestion
STATUS: Open!
Ravi hates everything.
No, that's too kind. Ravi loathes everything with the fires of hell layered upon teenybopper performances and CDC-firing bosses on top of that. Ever since he'd woken up from the morning after the feast, he's felt sort of off. Then, this morning, 'off' became the fiery guts of Dante's circles of hell, at least four through seven. He's trudged to the hospital on the auspices that he might work, but truthfully, as soon as he's arrived, he collapses face down on the nearest bed and manages to groan. Even that ends up hurting his body, peering out through blurry vision at a shape that seems to be coming in the door.
What he hasn't actually noticed is the rash, mainly because he's been so occupied with feeling miserable. He turns onto his back and stares at the too-bright ceiling, squinting as he drapes his arm over his eyes, wishing death upon himself.
"Why?" he complains, searching for something to drink because he doesn't even know what would make him feel better. He doesn't even know what it is, because this has no hallmark of food poisoning and he doesn't think this is a disease that he's seen before. Or maybe it is and he's just too discombobulated to actually tell what's going on.
He stares at the person, squinting and reaching out with a needy hand. "Please tell me you've come to put me out of my misery," he pleads.
no subject
"We should find out if anyone else is sick," he says, trying to stand up and flopping over to collapse in the bed, a little. "What if this is a targeted attack?"
no subject
"I will try to find out," she corrects, pressing her hands to his shoulders to keep him down. "You need to rest. Honestly, you're just as stubborn as one of my best friends."
Jean-Luc never liked coming in for his monthly check-ups, usually she had to hound him into showing or drag him into sickbay practically by his ear, and he was a terrible patient. Ravi seems to be just like him in so many ways.
no subject
"Tell me what to do, doctor," he gets out past his scratchy, dry throat.
no subject
"As long as you stay right there," she tells him pointedly. "If I feel you're overdoing it or you try to get up again, I really will have you lying there and counting the dots on the ceiling."
If there are dots. She hasn't really looked in all honesty.
"If I had a decent way to analyze a blood sample, that would be a good start."
Decent, as in Starfleet technology level, which is, again, frustratingly impossible.
no subject
He's not sick enough to actually say that out loud, however, because he still has a fairly good sense of self-preservation, no matter how terrible he feels. "You can borrow my microscope," he offers, because he's cleaned and sanitized several of the slides, which means they're ready to use again. "I'm not exactly rushing to be excited about giving you my blood," he admits, "but I'd rather feel better."
Even if he is going to miss out on all the analyzing, which feels like a double gut-punch. He has to feel miserable and he misses out on science.
no subject
A microscope is also a start, though Beverly doubts it has the range and specifications of the ones she's used to using. She sighs at the rest of his comment. Not that she can blame him, she isn't exactly hyped up to be using something as barbaric as a needle and syringe, but they don't have a lot of options.
"Honestly, I'm still getting used to the lack of decent equipment here," she says with a hint of frustration. It isn't meant to be superiority speaking, simply observation. "If you have a better idea, I'm all ears."
On the plus side, she'll at least offer him an analysis as she goes, see if he's coherent enough to offer anything while she works. They could tag-team it that way.
no subject
He's not going to like it, but he's used to samples, especially when he uses himself as a non-zombie control for so much of his work back home.
no subject
"Let's just say that everything we do is entirely non-invasive," she explains slowly as she grabs the kit and picks out what she'll need to do this. "And I'd be able to heal the pinprick of a needle in a nano-second if we did have to use one. Being here has its own learning curve for me."
no subject
That, or it's the constant bedrest that's starting to make him more than a little far from trustworthy when it comes to what he's saying. "That can't exist, it's too perfect."
no subject
"Yes, it's a perfect fairytale world where aliens exist, humans aren't exclusively born on Earth, and technology can heal almost anything," she continues in a tone that usually conveys a joke, all the while prepping the needle and disinfecting it. "If I lived in a world like that, why would I need to know how to use one of these?"
Which she clearly does, as she moves to find a vein in his arm to extract some of his blood. Not too much, but enough to hopefully provide something of an answer.
no subject
"How come I meet all these space travelers and none of you look any different?" he complains, scratching at the bumps and hives on his neck. "It's not fair, I want to meet a proper alien. I deserve it, by now."
no subject
Aliens, though, are terribly commonplace, though that term has become something of an improper term.
"Well, if I ever see one, I'll let you know," she says with barely-contained amusement as she moves to find the microscope. One step down, several to go. "Should I ask what you would do if you did meet one?"
no subject
The fever is definitely cooking his brain and later, he'll care, but right now, he's more concerned with his tongue. He sticks it out at Beverly, mindless of what he's just said. "Ith my tongue thwollen?" he asks, sticking it out at her. "Are there hives?"
no subject
“Well, hopefully those guys don’t have a queen to follow,” she says casually. “I hear zombie queens aren’t very pleasant.”
It’s mostly true. She’s never met the Borg queen face-to-face, but she’s known people who have. And honestly? She never wants to be one of those people.
Ravi sticks his tongue out at her and she can’t help the laugh that bubbles up within her. It’s more than she expected, but then again he seems delirious. Chances are he won’t remember this when he’s back to normal. “Not that I can tell. Does it feel swollen?”
no subject
He knows the last isn't the worst, but to Ravi, it sort of feels like it. "It feels too big in my mouth," he complains, "and dry. It's a very dry tongue."
no subject
"You did? How'd you manage that?" It almost sounds like the time Beverly had pioneered the techniques to return someone from their life as a Borg drone. If she had the right equipment, she could do it again easily. Well, maybe not easily but she could do it. Here, though? She doesn't expect to ever get that equipment and the surgery is delicate enough with it. She isn't sure she would dare try without.
So if a Borg drone ever turns up, they might be in deep trouble.
no subject
"So it was just reverse-engineering the effects using similar ingredients and a lot of lab rats. Rat labs?" he squints. "Rat labs," he says confidently, through his cooked brain.
no subject
She had, after all, needed to learn the cybernetic ins and outs of the Borg drones in order to turn Locutus back to Jean-Luc. Many of those implants could never be removed, not without killing the patient, but she had done enough to save him and return him to the person he should be. Not a drone. She can still remember seeing him as a drone, turning that corner inside the cube to see him at the end of the corridor. The eye. The cybernetic implants across his face. Knowing, knowing, that he no longer was her best friend and captain. That he was likely lost forever. That his body would still function, but his mind was long gone.
A shiver runs down her spine that has nothing to do with the temperature in the room.
"Here, I think I've got something. Can you sit up for a few minutes so we can look at this?"
It's nothing, really. She doesn't have a cure or even a real reason why he's feeling like this, but she wants to focus on something that isn't the Borg. Or zombies. And maybe with two sets of eyes, even if one of them is a little off right now, they can come up with something.
no subject
He nods, swallowing with a great deal of effort, and trying to take his mind off it. "What did you find?"[ ]
no subject