http://hcliffhuxtable.livejournal.com/ (
hcliffhuxtable.livejournal.com) wrote in
ways_infirmary2007-03-19 11:41 am
(no subject)
Cliff's usually pretty easygoing with odd or difficult patients.
A man who is at times a firebreathing lizard the size of a building might be considered to be a bit beyond "odd and/or difficult".
He'll deal. He'll also tell said patient to sit his ass down and stay put, thank you very much. "Kill the arch enemy" is what you do after you don't have huge unhealed chunks missing from your skin, not during or beforehand.
So. Handwavey goodness: there are two patients sharing a curtained section of the Infirmary, a two year old human child who has been severely beaten and needed a fractured arm set, as well as sutures over a deliberately made laceration on the same
arm; and a man by the name "Chinthliss" with third-degree chemical burns for which he has been treated.
Both have been tucked in and given reassurance, made as comfortable as possible. Some kind soul left the child a stuffed toy that he's presently clinging to, even while napping. Cliff hasn't been able to find out the boy's name.
Strong painkillers have been administered as well as IV fluids, so Chinthliss may be out of it,but Cliff leaves up a note on the office door requesting that any Infirmary personnel who happen by, look in on them. He'll be doing so periodically, too.
A man who is at times a firebreathing lizard the size of a building might be considered to be a bit beyond "odd and/or difficult".
He'll deal. He'll also tell said patient to sit his ass down and stay put, thank you very much. "Kill the arch enemy" is what you do after you don't have huge unhealed chunks missing from your skin, not during or beforehand.
So. Handwavey goodness: there are two patients sharing a curtained section of the Infirmary, a two year old human child who has been severely beaten and needed a fractured arm set, as well as sutures over a deliberately made laceration on the same
arm; and a man by the name "Chinthliss" with third-degree chemical burns for which he has been treated.
Both have been tucked in and given reassurance, made as comfortable as possible. Some kind soul left the child a stuffed toy that he's presently clinging to, even while napping. Cliff hasn't been able to find out the boy's name.
Strong painkillers have been administered as well as IV fluids, so Chinthliss may be out of it,but Cliff leaves up a note on the office door requesting that any Infirmary personnel who happen by, look in on them. He'll be doing so periodically, too.
