many words, and I would, though why anybody would want to steal such a thing I couldn’t imagine. But even as Voorhees rolled Xe off to surgery, the old man cast a backward glance my way to make sure I was living up to my end of the bargain.
That incident exhausted all of the good humor I had for the day, and when I sat down to do the chart, I felt like a boiling lobster. Sweat saturated my hair and dripped into my eyes. My fatigues stuck to my back and armpits, the backs of my legs, and my crotch. My bra was soaked and clammy. I hate heat and always have. It shuts down my thinking ability by at least 75 percent. I get slow and clumsy, and my skin feels like a freshly tarred road gumming onto everything that touches it. I get faint and headachy and my temper is about as stable as nitroglycerin. I gulped two salt tablets and sat down with my head between my knees for a moment, my hands, where they pressed against my eyes, feeling sticky as those of a two-year-old who’s just finished eating candy. Ahn’s shrill whine sawed through the heat, irritating as the buzzing of a thousand mosquitoes. Damn! And I still had to do the little bastard’s dressings. I peeled myself off the chair and jerked the dressing cart away from the wall so hard it clattered. Jesus, it was so hot even my skin seemed to be sending off red light, as if it were boiling. I paused for a moment, closing my eyes just so some part of me could be cool in the shade my eyelids provided. I couldn’t touch the kid feeling like this. I took three deep breaths and opened my eyes again. Well, better. My skin was only giving off a hot rosy glow now. I wheeled the cart over. Now it looked as if the kid was glowing red—red and kind of a murky eggplant color that intensified and darkened when he glared up at me and started shrieking.
“Oh, shut up, I haven’t touched you yet,” I snapped. He looked right at me and howled louder.
“Okay, kid, that’s it. I’ve had it with you and so has everybody else. You’re not the only one around here who’s been hurt, you know.” But he just kept howling. I couldn’t, I simply could not, keep listening to that racket while I worked on him. I pushed him over on his side and swatted his rear. “Now, em di, dammit. We’re all tired of you. Just shut up.” I gave him about four swats, the pink of my hand blurring to red as it hit the red around his rear.
He didn’t yell any louder. In fact, his shrieking died off to a whimper, then a snuffle, by the time I got control of myself and stopped abusing my patient. He sniffed and looked at me for the first time without the hatred and terror I was used to seeing in his face. I couldn’t figure it out. I was feeling like the Marquise de Sade and the kid was definitely in the best mood he’d been in since he arrived. The light around him looked cooler somehow, too, and less murky. My own had faded to dusty pink. I laid my hand on his forehead, thinking that maybe the color had something to do with fever.
His skin was sweaty but cool, and he watched me, not fearfully, but with a funny kind of anticipation. And it came to me that he didn’t know nurses weren’t supposed to paddle their patients. He knew he’d been thoroughly annoying everybody, but he felt lost and abandoned. The spanking and my scolding voice, even speaking English, had made it seem as if his mother were still with him, in control of the world, telling him what to do. I knew that as certainly as if he’d told me, though I didn’t know then how I knew it. But whatever passed between us he didn’t ask to understand but simply accepted with relief. His face smoothed out of its monkeylike scowl and his lids dropped like rocks as he passed into long-overdue sleep.
“Ooh!” Xinh cried and shook her hand. I left the dressing cart by Ahn’s bed and walked to hers. A blur of blue-green light surrounded her. I blinked hard, but the light remained.
“What’s wrong, Xinh?”
She held up her hand so I could see the fingernail broken