• Tuesday 10th - VH Day.

    I wake up. It is early morning. Tuesday 10th. It has been one week since my incarceration. One week since the outbreak of war between God and I. Each day has been longer than the day preceding. The great skyfairy has been cunning. He has played his hand in direct assaults and convenient accidents; nutritional and psychological warfare; and foiled my attempt to break out via Switzerland.

    Worst of all, he killed Katie Holmes.

    ******** b*****d.

    I am nervous. There is no doubt that today God will present his most challenging situation yet; but I am hungry, I am tired, and I am afraid. The nurses' continual checking has disturbed my sleep. My soup privileges have been revoked. My possessions have been repossessed. My only celebrity friend has been slaughtered by a psychotic wilderbeast. Her compatriots have become equally obsessed with my destruction. I have only one solution. It is sly. It is cunning. It is hot.

    I'll take a shower.

    A shower is the ultimate problem solver. Rheem, unknown too many, was a genius among men. It is the facilitator of all solutions in life. I will take one, I will think, and I will prevail.

    With great effort, I walk hunched over to the enclosed bathroom. I open the door and shut it behind me. I take a seat, grab the shower hose, and commence showering.

    It feels degrading to have to shower sitting down, but boy is it comfy. Too bad the water is heat, pressure and time limited. They could've just given me a bucket. Then again, the hospital knows better than to give me a bucket.

    I could do awful, awful things with a bucket.

    The shower shuts off and I get up. I am refreshed. I am happy. So far, the morning has run smoothly and without incident. Sadly, I have not yet learnt the lessons of my complacency. God plays his hand. He pulls blackjack.

    ********.

    Stepping out of the shower I slip on the plastic lid of a jelly cup - the contents of which I fed to the toilet some days ago. I fall back, grab at the curtains, and land on my back. My shoulders take the brunt. My head taps the tiles lightly. The bulldozers in my kidneys go on a joyride. A morphine burrito would go down so well right about now. I lie on my back. I will wait for the pain to subside. I will carry on with my normal duties. The nurses will be none the wiser. I cannot; will not; give them a reason to prolong my stay. My sanity, and my life, depends on it.

    A few seconds pass. I notice an orange glow from the shower corner of the ceiling. It has never shined before.

    Once again I am oblivious. Once again I lose precious seconds. Once again the septic system is poised to assault my fan.

    It all comes together. The light is connected to a long string reaching all the way to the ground. Above the light is a plaque.

    “Pull for assistance.”

    There are only two nurses now assigned to my room - psycho b***h and the captain.

    And one of them is coming. Now.

    I assess the situation. I am lying immobile on the floor. I am cold. I am wet. I am naked. There is a jelly cup lid on my heel.

    God has played his hand, so I play mine: I pull a 3 of diamonds and an expired discount voucher for Civic Video.

    I am so ********.

    Then it happens. An angry bang on the door. It is psycho nurse. The hospital bouncer. She is not pleased. She has not yet consumed her morning meal of baby.

    "What do you want?" she snaps.

    Wow. Such hospitality. Where'd they find this gem of a worker. The abattoir? I think fast. I tell her I'm just getting dried. I reach for the towel and rub it through my hair to mimic the sound. This was a mistake.

    My head hits the tiles and I grunt in pain. Psycho b***h realizes something’s up. For all she knows, I could be training a Golden Retriever to don a balaclava and attack the medical staff. I wouldn't put it past her.

    "Do you want me to come in?"

    Do you want a mastectomy?

    "I'm going to come in."

    The ******** you are. There's only one option. I outstretch my foot and jam it up against the door. Psycho nurse pushes hard. I will hold. I must hold. If they find I am injured, they will hold me longer for observation. If they find I have hit my head, they will hold me overnight.

    This can not happen.

    "What's going on. I can't open the door."

    Over-drive time. I tell her my drip stand is up against the door.

    "YOU'RE DRIP STAND ISN'T BLOCKING THE DOOR. IN FACT, I CAN SEE IT FROM HERE. IT'S NEXT TO THE BED."

    Dang. The psycho nurse is smarter than I thought. Her vision isn't based on movement at all. Last time I trust Jurassic Park to help me escape from a hospital bathroom naked.

    "Open the door."

    I tell her I can't. I continue making noise with my towel. I plead she will go away.

    "Why not."

    I have three words for her. Drip. Door. Jammed.

    "WE JUST WENT THROUGH THIS."

    I slip into over-over drive for the second time in two days. The result is instantly regrettable. I will never understand the thought processes involved. I have doubts as to whether any thinking took place at all.

    I sing to the tune of Banana Boat. Loudly. Many seconds elapse. I am cold. I am shivering. I am paining. I am lying naked on the bathroom tiles of a concentration camp hospital with a towel around my head.

    And I am singing.

    "I'M GETTING THE HEAD NURSE."

    Finally, she leaves. Here is my opportunity. The pain has subsided just enough for action. I struggle back onto my feet. I throw a singlet on and a pair of pants. I fling open the door and throw the towel behind me. I cripple-jog to my bed. I lift myself onto it. I pull the covers up to my chest. My heart is beating. My pulse is racing. My escape hinges on this action.

    Seconds later, psycho nurse arrives with the head of the ward. They check the bathroom first. They find water, soaked pajamas, and a twisted towel. They do not find the drip or patient 67.

    The head nurse exits the bathroom and spots me. She marches towards the bed. She is in a controlled rage. Her pupils are dilated. Her cheeks are flush. Her very being quakes with fury.

    I am not a smart man. I am still in over-over drive. A smart man does not stay in over-over drive. I am half-smiling. My voice is feeble.

    “I don’t suppose you like Jurassic Park?”

    Nice.

    It is late morning. My belongings have been returned. The doctor has visited me. I inform her that my stay has been uneventful. She laughs. I exit my room on my feet. I head East to the elevators. On my way, I pass by Switzlerland. The man in the wheelchair stretches his arm out, begging me to take him. But I cannot. I leave him to his fate. It pains my heart. It truly does. He was here when I arrived. He is still here as I am leaving. I promise to myself that one day I will liberate the captives here. I will be the hero facing the darkness and heralding the dawn. Until then, I must survive. God is still pissed. And I know it. Boy do I know it.

    I exit the elevator. Ground floor. Sunlight streams in through the double glass doors. I am smiling. I am warm. I am happy.

    I sign out at reception. I am free. Free from heparin needles, psycho nurse, jelly, the pirate ship captain, and seated showers. A cloud passes over and softens the sunlight.

    I am not free yet. God is not accustomed to failure. His vengeance will be swift. Today is VH day. Victory-in-Hospital day. But the war is not over. It is in its closing stages, but there are still more hands to play.

    Then, a friendly voice. The voice of someone not trying to kill me. It is harmonious.

    “Over here!”

    It is my friend. He has come to pick me up. I walk over to him. He dangles car keys from his hand. I ask him if I can drive.

    “Oh man, hahah, far out man, hell no, no ******** way.”

    He turns around and walks out the door, still laughing. It was worth a try.

    I approach the doors and take my first step outside. Storm clouds loom on the horizon.

    The words form in my mind. I know he can hear them.

    “If you want me.”

    A boom of thunder resonates in the distance.

    “Come ******** take me.”


    Wednesday 11th - VH Day +1

    I wake up. I am in my bed. My bed. It is the morning after VH day. I have escaped medical Stalingrad as the Wermacht surrendered next door in a blaze of morphine-induced fury. Tens of thousands have laid down their arms and crossed over to the other side; abandoning me to my fate.

    ******** the Wermacht. I will fight on alone.

    I look out the window. I am not smiling. God's offensive - brilliantly planned, yet poorly executed - has been repulsed by a unit of his own creation. The unit has successfully withdrawn from behind enemy lines; across rivers of heparin-fuelled flames and miles of antibiotic jungle; to safe territory. It is time to think. Time to consolidate. Time for action.

    It is time for the counter-offensive.

    It is time to realize the paradox of an antibiotic jungle.

    I assess the situation. It is grim. Bleak. Jelly remains in world-wide circulation. New hospitals are under construction all over the globe. In Switzerland, clowns lie dying in the streets. Cripples everywhere rally to avenge the slaughter of Miss Holmes. A confused and PMS-suffering Woman's Day launches an offensive into New Idea. Five celebrities become fat in the subsequent gossip dead-zone. Two more are wed. The world is outraged. Tensions reach boiling point. A s**t the size of which the world has never seen is about to hit a fan no larger than a toaster. Worst of all, I somehow caught the flu.

    This is what happens.

    This is what happens when you piss off God.

    Compounding the dire situation is one simple, harrowing fact: God is immortal, I am not. In the absence of a work-around for this I am royally ********. I could be a martyr. I could sacrifice myself to appease God and set things right. But suicide is a sin. I would go to hell. I have been to hell. It is not peachy. Not peachy in the slightest. I would prefer to prolong my stay on Earth. I will survive.

    I rise to shower. I will pray to Rheem. I will need his strength. While undergoing this steamy meditation, God's progression becomes clear.

    God created the Earth, and man, in 7 days. I had spent 7 days fighting against man and his creations. And man, unto God's order, is governed by the 10 commandments.

    Creation and the ten commandments. God is a big fan of symbolism. This will be no exception. His offensive hasn't stalled at all. It has quieted. Time to think. Time to consolidate. Time for action. On the tenth day, Saturday 14th, it's go-go time for God's retribution against me. No fan is big enough for the s**t about to come. With a thousand years, and a trillion men, no fan could be made big enough. There is only one solution.

    I must dismantle the s**t itself.

    From the inside.

    This leaves me with 3 days. If God is going to rest today, than so will I. I am exhausted. I am receiving soup, but I am still weak. My mid section still pains. I am restricted to light activity only. ******** that, I have a war to win. Does inter-ethereal war count as light activity? For America perhaps, but for me, no chance.

    It is lunch time. I have had soup. I am happy. I am content. I decide to go for a walk. Walking is important after staying in hospital because the lungs become congested from disuse. While I might not be on speaking terms with my b*****d child kidneys, I happen to enjoy a mutual friendship with my lungs. Therefore, I will protect them. I will walk.

    I walk in the nature reserve often and without incident. Today however, I would encounter God's auxiliary units, from which I would learn one thing.

    God still wants local man dead.

    I am ten, maybe fifteen minutes into the walk. I'm walking through the big nature reserve near my house. It's pleasant, but the reserve has somewhat of a bad reputation. Today though, I am just happy to enjoy the quiet of nature and the sunshine. The track narrows to a small rock-crossing over the remnants of an eroded creek. One person crosses at a time.

    I walk down to the creek. A kid, maybe 17, maybe 18, sits on a BMX in the centre of the crossing. He has acne everywhere and a s**t haircut. I was once told bogan's love rust, but inner-city bogans are of a different variety. They like chrome. Anything chrome is the bomb. The shinier, the better. They are Chrome Bogans.

    This BMX was shiny. I figured it was stolen. Chrome Bogan's can't afford bikes. That bogans have adapted to ride them is a marvel of evolution unto itself.

    "What the ******** do you want."

    Yeah, this is going to be pleasant. I tell him to step aside. I add ", kid" to the end of it.

    Chrome Bogans don't like to be belittled. They are the Adam and Eve of psycho nurse - all traits inherited.

    "******** you dickhead."

    Chrome Bogan looks at my tee-shirt. He's looking for an add-on to his own insult. He's doing a s**t job. My shirt reads "O-week," as in university O-week.

    "O-week. What ******** gay s**t is that."

    I would kill him if I could. Shame I can't. My next move defies logic, and is not one I would take again. I have reason to believe my kidneys had already boarded flights to Fiji at the time of the incident. My brain most likely had detached from my spinal cord; dug a fox-hole, and bunkered down. Wherever the ******** the three of them were, they weren't with me at the time. I speak flatly.

    "******** if I know. But the O reminds me of the face cunts like you make when you're sucki-"

    I never did get to finish that sentence. Shame. Twas' snappy.

    I get king-hit in the back of the head; off-centre by someone I didn't realize was behind me. I go straight to the ground like a dead weight. Chrome Bogan dismounts and kicks me in the upper back. ******** hurts. Agony. White flecks are filling my vision. I don't want to pass out. I feel rustling in my jeans pocket.

    A few minutes later my vision is fixed and I get up. My head ******** pains. My back is OK though. I'm just glad they didn't kick me in the stomach. One-way trip back to Stalingrad that would've been.

    My wallet is lying about ten meters away. My cards are strewn in the trees and shrubs around it. The fifty bucks worth of notes that were in there is gone. Luckily, my car keys and my phone were in my other pocket, which was pushed against the ground and covered when I fell. I call my mate.

    He gets there in five minutes and helps me back to the car. I ask him if I can drive. Guess.

    He takes me to the police station and I give a statement. I decline the offer of medical help. ******** God, be a little more cunning would you.

    It is night. I am in bed. My bed. It is the night after VH day, and I continue to survive.

    "I’m coming for you God."

    I look out the window. Dark clouds diffuse the moonlight. A lone star shines in solitary defiance.

    "Bigtime."


    Thursday 12th - VH Day +2

    I wake up. It is mid-morning. Today marks the second day of my flight from medical Stalingrad. Including today, this leaves 3 days until Saturday - the day God's war-machine shifts into overdrive and Blitzkrieg's my butt. I cannot repel this offensive. This had been made clear. I have a Chrome Bogan inflicted bruise on my back to prove it. If I am to have any hope of defeating God, I must strike on the 13th; before the curtain rises. There will be no encore. No repeat performance if I fail. I have showered profusely. Rheem has shown me the way. The fallen have given me the will. Everything hinges on tomorrow's action.

    Christmas comes early kids. Crank the ******** milk and cookies. We've got a war to win.

    But first, I must navigate the labyrinth of God's bureaucratic b***h. The ultimate institution for crippling men's minds through unnecessary documentation, duplication, and red tape.

    Welcome to University. Prepare to be ********.

    I dress myself. It takes me ten minutes. My mid-section, upper-back, and head are having a house party at my expense. Attrition is taking it's toll. I must make it through today unharmed. My capacity for injury has been reached, and then some.

    I board a bus. An hour later, I board a second bus. A ten minute walk after that, and I am standing outside the student office at university. It is lunch time. The short walk has nearly killed me. My mid-section is paining something fierce. I am glad the queue is short. I am desperate to get home.

    "Next," says the man.

    I am disturbed. The guy serving me has bags the size of grapes under his eyes. They seem unstable. They quiver with his speech. I pray they do not explode.

    "Hi, I spent a week in hospital and missed some tutorials. I want to apply for special consideration."

    I am smiling. I am perky. I am the girl scout on your front porch offering cookies for money. I am your biscuit prostitute. I hope our transaction is savory.

    Bagman does not smile back. God has forewarned the University of my coming. They have prepared themselves well.

    "Go make photocopies."

    This seems unnecessary. I ask him why. In retrospect, I should've told him the vineyard on his face was ready for harvest. A lot of future pain could have been avoided. I may even have scored some wine.

    "You need to make a photocopy for each course."

    Ok. Fair enough. I'll pay that. I ask him if he wants all of the photocopies.

    "You take them to each faculty in person, and bring one to me."

    The faculties are located huge distances apart, but I will respect procedure. An incident is the last thing I need.

    I walk to the library. It's a huge effort to walk without grimacing. My kidneys are dive-bombing off the roof into the pool that is my bowel. Everything is getting wet. Everything is getting sore.

    I photocopy the medical document I need four times. The cost is $1.20 per sheet. I make the trek back to the student office. I wait in the queue. Once again, I confront Bagman.

    I hand him the photocopies. He takes the original, and leaves the photocopies on the counter. I tell him I'll go hand the copies into the relevant faculty offices.

    Bagman plays his hand.

    "First year subjects don't accept special consideration for missed tutorials. You just get counted as not having attended."

    He smiles. Dead set smirks. He is overflowing with self-importance.

    I ask him why he had me make photocopies. I want to know why I just spent twenty minutes tearing the s**t out of my insides to waste my money

    "Not my problem," he says.

    Absolute ********. I decide I need to break even with Bagman. Two seconds of silence passes. I speak.

    "Are they seedless?"

    Bagman is confused.

    "What?" he says.

    "The grapes."

    "What grapes?"

    "Red wine or white."

    "What? What are you talking about?"

    "Vintage? I'm thinking vintage."

    "What is it?"

    I make a V with my right hand and hold it in front of my face. I smile.

    Flip goes the Bagman.

    I start walking away. The queue behind me is laughing. Bagman stands up and presses his face against the plastic divider screen. He starts yelling. Loudly. His eye-bags are fluttering. I can't laugh. It hurts to laugh. But I am happy. It is time to go home.

    It is late afternoon and the sun is ready to set when I catch my first bus. I then wait in line for my second bus, which arrives ten minutes late. I am first in line. Yay for me.

    I pay for my ticket and choose the seat behind the driver, on the right hand side of the bus. I do not want to stumble around trying to get off and risk injuring myself. God will not score his prey that easily.

    The bus fills up. A man comes and sits next to me. He has a monobrow and more chins than fingers though, so I need not... not... respect him? I flashback to the nurse and doctor I met in hospital. Bizarre b*****d offspring? You decide. I begin to wonder if his eyebrow could act as a sun visor. I drop this line of thought immediately.

    The doors close and our bus driver - a pleasant Oriental man - begins to move off. That's when I notice it.

    That's when I notice another bus coming in particularly close on my side. It has no blinker on. I think nothing of it.

    Welcome to the public transport system - God's elite cadre of assassins.

    Our bus driver slams on the brakes and shouts out. The other bus, as we are moving to leave, cuts us off and heads into the bus shelter lane. The front-left of the other bus slams into the front-right of our bus. The side-view mirror is sheered right off. The impact is halfway between the driver’s seat and my seat. The glass window to my right shatters inwards. The bus lurches and bumps the bus shelter itself, snapping off a part of its perspex roof. I am already buckled over from the sudden braking when the bus hits. I am pushed sideways into the enormous parachute of a man next to me. My bag; resting on my lap before the crash, is first pushed hard into my abdomen, and then flung into the aisle. The other bus continues on for another thirty meters before stopping. Ous bus driver is swearing. He gets up and asks if we are all OK. Everyone nods. People are excited more so than angry. Bus crashes are the new black.

    We all exit the bus. I feel fine. I don't feel any pain at all. I walk away from the crowd of bus goers. The city sidewalk is incredibly busy. It is filled with people. Another bus rolls up. The people from my bus begin to line up. I wait until the last one has boarded before I approach. A man from the bus company stops me at the entrance. He is not pleased.

    "Ticket."

    I love bus service. Probably more than this man loves drowning kittens. I fumble around in my pocket for the ticket. Two seconds pass. Five, ten seconds pass.

    I've lost my ticket.

    I'm not too worried at this point. Surely, this man is not stupid enough to deny me entry. I explain that I was on the bus that just crashed. I describe the driver. I tell him the passengers on the bus could vouch for me too. I was truly surprised by his response.

    "Either pay for a ticket, or walk."

    Inside my head, a thousand tiny fans are disposing of a thousand tiny shits. I cannot believe what has just been said to me. Do they want me to pay for the ******** window that broke as well? I struggle to quell my rage, but I am not waiting an hour for another bus. I am going home. If that means paying for another ticket, then so be it.

    I open my wallet. I know I have $5.60 in here somewhere.

    Instead, I find 80 cents. Courtesy of the ******** vineyard.

    I begin to argue with the man. I point up at the windows and tell him to ask someone on the bus to vouch for me. But he is having none of it. He waves to the bus driver, and the bus drives away.

    I check my wallet for my keycard. Instead I find a note. It's from my sister.

    "Needed card to go to DFO. Pay you back. xoxo."

    I assess the situation. Now I understand the Wermacht's position. God's red army has blown apart my only method of transportation. I have .8 of a whole dollar in which to finance my retreat back to friendly territory.

    I am so royally ********. Again.

    I make a call. The familiar voice of my friend comes across the receiver. I explain to him what has happened.

    "You are a walking inconvenience. Ok, I’m coming."

    I love my friends. An hour later and we are driving in the direction of my house. Suddenly, my abdomen begins to pain. This isn’t my normal movement pain. This pain feels warm, burning and sharp. I disregard it. My friend asks for his phone, and I turn on the car ceiling light to rifle through the glove box.

    “Dude, I think you’re bleeding.”

    I look down at my shirt. Red spots are forming where two of my incisions were made. I tell him it’s not bleeding much.

    “Maybe you should get it checked out.”

    I am telling him I’m fine when I feel my abdominals tighten and go hard. The pain doesn’t increase, but my whole mid-section becomes rigid. I can feel the blood seeping out onto my skin.

    “I’m taking you to hospital bud.”

    I don’t argue with him a second time. I have no choice. God has forced my hand. I am going back.

    Back to medical Stalingrad.

    It is night. I am looking out the window. The same window. A crueler twist of fate I could not have envisioned, but it has happened. I am in the same room.

    Tonight is the eve of Friday 13th – the day of my offensive.

    God is playing hardball. He is winning.

    And things have never looked bleaker.


    Friday 12th - VH Day +3

    Room 67, Medical Stalingrad. 0200 hours.

    I have not slept since my arrival. The lights are out. A nurse patrols the hallways. The sound of her footsteps is distinct. She is the night shift. She works alone.

    The situation is dire, but I am optimistic. God has failed yet again, and I have made progress on two fronts.

    First, my bone marrow finally woke the ******** up and made some platelets so I didn’t bleed to death. Good game bone marrow. Second, the main forces of the hospital are unaware of my re-incarceration. The only staff to have seen me is the receptionist, and the night shift nurse. They smiled when they talked. No offers of penicillin were made. This can mean only one thing.

    They have no idea who I am.

    My friend is coming to see me in the morning. He will bring supplies. I will need them. I do not know what will happen when psycho nurse sees me. Her shift starts at 8am. The doctor will not come until tonight. By then, it may be too late. Every organ wants inside the bomb shelter that is my ribcage. My brain is trying to abseil down my spinal cord to dig a foxhole in my lung. My displaced kidney is trying to donkey-punch my bowel. I do not blame them. For only one thing is certain.

    s**t’s going to hit the fan. Again.

    I wake up. It is morning. I am hungry. I am edgy. It is past eight o’clock. My friend is late. Despite this, I have hope. Hope for success.

    Folly.

    Medical Stalingrad knows not of hope.

    I hear her voice before I see her face. Her greeting is the usual - served cold with a hint of “******** you”.

    "Wake up, breakf-"

    Psycho nurse is a few feet inside the room when our eyes meet. She is carrying a broom and a jelly cup. Probably the same broom she uses to clean her jelly cup cave. Silence passes between us. It is Chernobyl waiting to happen. The USSR about to collapse. I am prepared to say whatever is necessary to keep her calm. I cannot; will not; give her a reason to go apeshit. I cannot afford another setback on the day of my offensive.

    For the record, I so very much wanted this to end well.

    So very, very much.

    “Here’s breakfast.”

    My friend walks through the door and throws a McDonald’s bag on my bed.

    “I didn’t get you much. By the way you bled on my passenger seat. Who the ******** do you think you are?”

    I look at my friend. Psycho nurse looks at my friend. My friend looks at me. I look at psycho nurse. My friend looks at psycho nurse. Psycho nurse looks at me.

    Apocashit, initiate. All fans; GO for spin.

    “And why didn’t you tell me about the staff parking pay-box. You put two bucks in and you park for as long as you want without paying extra. Your ex’s mom told me. She’s pretty hot you know.”

    I look at my friend. I plead with my eyes for him to be quiet. I switch into overdrive. Damage control is in effect. I am still calm. The fans are still spinning. And while the fans are still spinning, there is still hope.

    “You going to eat it or what?”

    It is now that psycho nurse plays her hand. She points at my friend. The fans are struggling to cope. They sense the s**t about to come. I am desperate to defuse the situation. I consider over-over drive for a third time. My displaced kidney has no exit strategy. My brain is in my lung. My lung. There is nothing I can do.

    The following statement - reproduced word for word; profanity included - marks the moment in time the fans stopped spinning.

    “You; get out. You’re in my ******** hospital and you do what I say. This is plain madness.”

    I look at my friend. I know what is coming. From beyond the grave, Miss Portman bows her head. I will need her strength.

    “MADNESS?.”

    My friend tilts his head towards psycho nurse. His voice is bellowing. It echoes out into the hallway. If God didn’t know I was here before, he does now.

    "NO."

    Psycho nurse is taken aback. Fleeting silence fills the room.

    “THIS. IS. SPARTAAA!”

    Psycho nurse looks to him, and then to me. Her mouth is open. There is outrage and confusion in her eyes. I think I want to die.

    My friend laughs and walks out the door.

    “Don’t go flying away on that thing yeah?”

    Psycho nurse looks at the broom in her hands as my friend disappears around the corner. My McDonalds bag falls on the floor.

    Room 67, Medical Stalingrad. 2100 hours.

    Doctor can’t see me until tomorrow. My friend has been barred from the hospital. Psycho nurse gave me another painful-as-s**t heparin injection. My bone marrow is threatening to stop platelet production unless working conditions are improved. My displaced kidney is lost and disorientated. The better part of my brain is still in my lung.

    My offensive; the counter offensive; has failed. My only chance to halt what has now become the inevitable has come and gone. Tomorrow, I make my last stand against God’s Red Army with what little I have left. I will be ready. I will stand before the castle. I will herald the dawn.

    A man once said Medical Stalingrad knows not of hope.

    But none the matter.

    Medical Stalingrad knows not of me.


    Saturday 14th - End of Days

    It is morning. I have eaten soup. I sit alone in a bunker, watching an empty beach. I am tense. I am nervous. For 10 long days, God's Red Army has been on the war path. His cunning has been nothing short of genius. His resolve nothing short of steel. God has ******** my s**t up. Epically ******** my s**t up. Millions of fans have been destroyed. Good fans. Heroes to the last blade.

    Today is His last chance for vengeance. I have no equipment. No master plan. No ally. I have showered, but Rheem will not answer my calls. It dawns on me that Room 67 holds no promise for my survival. I will need help. Expert help. And thus, my mission becomes clear.

    Contact the Resistance. Defeat psycho nurse. Kill God.

    Easier said than done.

    I get up and walk out into the hallway with mild pain. I take my friend's drivers license with me. It must have fallen out of his wallet during his battle with psycho. I will protect it from her.

    Walking North I reach the Patient Lounge. Switzerland. Home of the Resistance. I walk in. The Medical SS have been here. There are no Woman's Day's on the table. New Idea spies have replaced them. I must tread carefully.

    A familiar face greets me as I sit down. It is the man in the wheelchair who witnessed my failed breakout from Medical Stalingrad. He is smiling. He seems surprised to see me.

    "I thought they let you out. What'd you do this time?"

    I cut to the chase.

    "Pissed off God."

    He laughs. I cut to a better chase.

    "Was in a bus crash. Just waiting for doctor to give me the OK."

    "Dang, that sucks mate."

    I talk to the man in the wheelchair for an hour. He is in his sixties and has been here for 2 months. He's divorced and has kids, but they don't visit very often. I feel bad for him. He jokingly refers to himself as "Wheelchair," since he's been in one for so long. I like this name. I take him under my wing. Sitting next to Wheelchair is an older man. His eyes never move from the floor. A cane rests in his lap. I can tell the two are good friends. They both smile and laugh.

    I bring up the topic of psycho nurse. Instantly, the two men know who I am talking about. They recount similar horror stories. One thing becomes painfully clear - she is insatiable, and will stop at nothing.

    A few hours later we three meet Wheelchair in his room. They laugh at my story.

    “s**t guys, 6 o’clock,” says Wheelchair.

    Heparin needle time, courtesy of psycho nurse. She is roistered on tonight. A fact we are all well aware of.

    “We could make a break for it. Get outside before anyone sees us.”

    I look at Wheelchair. He is grinning like a crazycake. From this point onwards, I want one thing made clear.

    I love this man.

    We begin. Wheelchair rolls himself out first. The guy with the cane walks out second. I walk out behind them. The hallway is deserted. We begin our trek to the set of elevators. It takes forever. Wheelchair moves slow. I glance at my watch. We are behind schedule. Dangerously behind schedule.



    We get halfway before the doors open. Halfway before She exits into the hallway. Psycho nurse. Hospital detective. Hot on our trail. She sees me. There is rage in her eyes. I am afraid. She yells for us to stop. She is pissed. Beyond pissed. I am convinced I am going to die.


    “Back up.”

    It’s Wheelchair. He turns to look at me.

    “BACK THE ******** UP.”

    Psycho nurse begins to shout. She starts to stride. The gap between us is closing. Fast. I am transfixed on her approach. She is the jelly incarnate. Her movements are fluid. Natural Selection has granted her inhuman speed. She is more sugar than man.

    “Push me.”

    I look at Wheelchair. He wheels himself around in the opposite direction.

    “PUSH ME IF YOU WANT TO LIVE.”

    I take hold of the wheelchair from behind. Wheelchair grips the rims. He tells his friend with the cane to turn around and find another way out. His friend says he knows a way. Psycho nurse is cantering. Hard. There are mere seconds between us. This is my last chance for survival. There will not be another attempt. The forces of evil pursue us into the night. Darkness be my friend.

    I slip into over-over drive. The gear stick breaks off. The revs are high. There is no going back.

    Go-time baby.

    We begin tearing down the hallway away from psycho nurse. She charges. In slow motion, Wheelchair outstretches his hand in front of us. He raises his head to one side. His voice is deafening.

    “TO FREEDOM!”

    Pushing a grown man in a wheelchair, even with his help, is ******** hard. I am exhausting myself. But by God are we flying. We approach an intersection. Wheelchair’s friend is running - cane in hand - in front of us.

    “Left!”

    The corner is 90 degrees. We are coming in fast. Wheelchair leans just enough to raise the right wheel. We whip around the corner like a skater on black ice. He has earned his title. One day I hope he will teach me.

    Down the end of this new hallway I see another threat. The ward head. She is careening towards us. Wheelchair and I stop. I yell out to his friend, only a few paces in front of us and still running.

    “Turn around! What are you blind?!”

    Every now and then, we experience a moment that totally floors us. This is one of those moments.

    “YES.”

    He doubles back and runs past us. Wheelchair and I race to catch up. I am in disbelief. Here I am, madly pushing a 60 year old guy in a wheelchair; a jellywoman trying to absorb us into her jellystomach, following a blind-man trying to coordinate an escape from Medical Stalingrad.

    “He knows this hospital better than you or I do. Trust him.”

    I give a weak smile. I will have faith.

    “ROOM NUMBERS,” says blind-man.

    I begin yelling them out as we pass them. Psycho nurse and the ward head are right behind us. Another nurse has joined the pursuit.

    “74! 72! 70!”

    “LEFT.”

    We round another corner. I recognize the hallway. Room 67 is towards the end. Racing down the carpet, I see my friend standing in the doorway looking into my room. He is here to collect his driver’s license. He turns and sees me.

    “Hey dude I think I left my- what the ******** is going on here.”

    There is no time to slow down. I tear past him.

    “Escape. Angry nurse. Sweet mother. Jesus.”

    My friend knows better than to get involved. He does not follow. I hear him call out after me.

    “******** that. Your funeral you idiot.”

    Then, a voice.

    “Hey you, you’re not supposed to be here! STOP!”

    My friend looks at psycho nurse. Psycho nurse looks at my friend. She is running fast.

    Ten seconds later, I look to my right. It is my friend

    “HEY GUYS! Room for one more?!”

    ********.

    “LEFT”

    My friend sees the problem first.

    “What left?! There is no left! Are you blind?!”

    Silence. Running continues. My friend sees our leader’s cane. It bashes into the floor and the walls around us. My friend turns his head to face me.

    “Holy s**t dude I think this guy is actually blind!”

    Wheelchair and I speak in unison.

    “WE KNOW.”

    My friend’s eyes go wide with fear. He thinks he is going to die.

    ********, I think I’m going to die.

    We continue straight ahead. I am still yelling out room numbers. Wheelchair has turned his head to face our pursuers. He yells as I yell.

    “36! 34! 32!”

    “AIE YE DEMONS, I DELIVER THEE UNTO HELL!”

    “28! 26! 24!”

    “…BURN ETERNALLY!”


    Wheelchair whips his head back and explodes into maniacal laughter. It is absolute insanity. My friend turns to face me. I have never, ever, seen him more genuinely afraid.

    “s**t DUDE ARE WE GONNA DIE.”

    “LEFT.”

    All four of us round the corner at high speed.

    Sure enough, two elevators lie at the end of the hallway. The doors on both are closed. I look at my friend.

    “GO.”

    He charges ahead to the elevator and calls it to our level. Meanwhile, Wheelchair is slowing down. I am exhausted. My arms are useless. They have no more give. Psycho nurse and her entourage round the corner. They charge towards the elevators. My friend desperately pushes the button. The doors open. It is empty. If I can just reach it…

    I give one last burst of energy. I push hard. Wheelchair pushes hard. Blind-man hauls his blind-butt. My friend is terrified. His finger is on the close door button.

    “COME ON.”

    We crash into the elevator and Wheelchair hits the back wall side on. My friend slams the button. The doors close with time to spare. I hit the button for ground level. I begin to think, just for a moment, that we have won. That we have escaped.

    This, boys and girls, is called complacency. One day, I will learn.

    My friend is excited. He jumps in the elevator. ******** idiot. Never jump in an elevator kids. They will break. It’s just what happens.

    The elevator stops moving. The doors open to reveal a brick facade. We are in between floors. Wheelchair’s friend, somehow, looks in the direction of my friend.

    “I’m blind and even I can see you’re an idiot.”

    I laugh. Wheelchair laughs.

    We quiet down. After ten minutes the lift is reset and begins moving again. Wheelchair turns to face me. His face is still flush.

    “Hey.”

    I face him.

    “Whatever happens. Thanks.”


    I understand where he’s coming from. Two months without a significant other, a son, a daughter, a sister, a brother, a mother, a father or simple friend come to see you. It would depress me too.

    But God has one final, ultimate hand to play. His last chance to kill me. To kill a local man.

    The lift doors open to reveal the nurses. They are more subdued now. There is an empty bed being rolled by a little ways in front of the lift doors. I move to exit out the elevator. I don’t notice that the floor of the elevator is slightly below the floor of the hospital ward. My foot catches on the lip and I fall forward.

    I remember the steel bars at the base of the bed getting closer and closer. I remember hearing a few gasps as I fell; drawn out in slow-motion. I remember a dull sense of pressure all over my head.

    Then nothing.

    I would not regain consciousness until late Sunday. I would later be told my three friends staged a bedside vigil for me throughout Saturday night. I was, and still am, touched to think about their efforts. I was checked for head injuries, and determined to be OK. I was however, being kept overnight for observation.

    That same night I got permission to go outside. It is dark. Traffic flows in red and white lines in the distance. A cold wind filters through the car park. The occasional headlight strafes the hospital wall. My breath curls in tendrils towards the clouds. I sit on a bench. My friend joins me soon after. He’s late, as always. I am the first to speak.

    “Hey.”

    “Hey.”

    “You know they transferred psycho nurse? They received something like 30 complaints from patients.”

    “Yeah I heard.”

    Silence passes. It is a beautiful night. The kind you wish you could capture in a bottle and keep forever. The air seems almost electric. It is thrilling to just sit, and watch, and listen.

    “Dude, I know I’m not real great with words and stuff…”

    I watch my friend waffle on. He eventually gets to the crux of it.

    “I just thought I’d let you know that I’m glad you’re still here.”

    There is sincerity in his words and in his face. My friend is a true friend. I have no doubt about that. I could not have endured the last fortnight without him.

    I look up at the sky. I had defied God’s Red Army and won victory over Medical Stalingrad. The end of a long and arduous campaign had come. I am smiling. I am happy. Soon, I can leave. My strength is returning. I feel better than I ever have in my entire life. I still return to the hospital every so often to visit my friends there. They are good people, just like Miss Portman and the population of Switzerland. One day, you might pay us a visit.

    But I hope you don’t have too. Not for a very, very long time.

    I am local man. God once wanted me dead.

    And this has been my story.