Claraβs Cardioversion
Our trauma bay sat ready under the bright fluorescent white wash of its overhead lights while the rest of the ER settled into the usual sluggish rhythm of a Tuesday night around 9 P.M. Inside the trauma bay, Dr. Lindsay stood at the foot of the table in a fresh pair of gloves, yellow gown tied around her back. Dr. Sarah waited a few steps to her left near the crash cart, glasses on, arms folded across her chest. Dr. Jen the resident was at the head of the table with her eyes on the doors. Nurse Heather took the right side of the table while Nurse Nancy stood on the left, IV pole already pulled in close, a small tray of IV bags and pre-drawn syringes within reach. Nobody spoke. The dispatch call from 10 minutes earlier still sat in everyoneβs mindβ 19 year old female, syncopal episode at home, tachycardic on the monitor, GCS fifteen, cooperative but scared.
Before our team knew it, the double doors that came from the hallway swung open.
An EMS gurney came through fast and smooth, three women in navy uniforms moving relatively in sync with each otherβ one at the head pushing, one at the foot keeping pace, one walking alongside. On the padded surface of the gurney, sitting upright with her knees bent slightly and both hands flat against her waist, was the patient. The young lady was barefoot. Her chest rose and fell quickly. Her dark brown eyes were wide open and tracking every little thing, and they found Lindsayβs face the moment the gurney crossed into the bay and locked there for a moment longer than absolutely necessary.
She was smallβ 5β0β (if that), slim and petite under the spread of leads and lines that ran across her skin. The young lady was an Asian-American female who was naturally tanβ the kind that didnβt come from a tanning bed/salon. Her hair sat at collarbone length, near-black and softly wavy, blunt bangs cut clean across her forehead. The features beneath them were strikingβ particularly those sharp dark eyes that were highly expressive. There was a thin silver hoop pierced through her right nostril, two equally small hoops through her earlobes. She wore a black sports bra and matching black underwear and nothing else; the outline of nipple piercings shaped the front of the bra in two small points. A patchwork tattoo sleeve covered her right arm shoulder to wristβ a layered collage of black ink work, fine lines and shading running into each other in a way that read deliberately curated rather than impulsive. A small crescent moon was inked on the outside of her left ankle, just above three silver anklets that reflected the overhead light each time the gurney moved. Her nails, fingers and toes both, were painted a fresh glossy bright white. Two 18 gauge IVs ran from the antecubital folds of each arm. Five EKG electrodes stuck to her ribcage around the sports bra. A pulse oximeter was clipped to the index finger of her right hand. A blood pressure cuff was wrapped around her left bicep area.
βClara Khai, 19 year old female,β began the medic at the foot of the gurney, her voice clean and unhurried. βWitnessed syncopal episode at home approximately 35 minutes ago. Partner made the 911 callβ said the patient was midsentence, sitting on the couch, and just dropped. Out for about 60 seconds. Regained consciousness on her own before we got on scene. By time we walked in she was alert and oriented, sitting up. Two large bore IVs in, 18 gauge, normal saline. On the rig we got her set up on the portable heart monitor. Heart rateβs 132 sinus tach with frequent PVCs and a couple of short runs of non-sustained V-tach. Pressure 106/64, sats 96 on room air. Chief complaint is palpitations, lightheadedness, and nausea. Reports sheβs felt off for two or three days, but couldnβt quite say how. No known cardiac history, no family history sheβs aware of. Vapes nicotine and occasional THC use, no illicit drug use as far as we know. No prescription meds, no known allergies.β
The medic at Clara's head leaned in slightly, voice softening as she addressed her patient. βAlright, Clara, weβre going to slide you over to their table in just a second. Youβre going to stay sitting up just the way you are now, nice and easy. On three.β
The medic at Clara's head finished her count, and the three of them slid Clara across in a single smooth motion, keeping her upright the whole way. The padded surface of the trauma room table received Clara without much complaintβ the small rustle of the transfer barely registering on her face, though her hands tightened a little against her thighs as she settled.
βAlright, Clara, youβre doing great,β one of the medics reassured, already stepping back.
Nurse Nancy moved in from Claraβs left almost before the EMS crew finished clearingβ clipping off the wires from the portable monitor and clipping in the hospital leads in their place. The EMS crewβs pulse oximeter came off Claraβs index finger and the ERβs was on a second later, this one tethered to the wall. The trauma bay monitor lit up almost immediately. Heart rate 136. BP 104 over 61. Sats 95 on room air. The rhythm strip running across the screen showed sinus tach interrupted every fourth or fifth beat by the wide, ugly downstroke of a PVC.
Dr. Lindsay was at the right side of the table now, just below Nurse Nancy, where Clara could see her without turning her head. She kept her voice low and steady.
βClara, Iβm Dr. Lindsay. Iβm the attending physician who will be taking care of you this evening, okay? Youβre in good hands.β Introduced Lindsay.
The EMS team was rolling the empty gurney back toward the doorway, handoff complete, the lead medic giving a small acknowledging nod to Lindsay on the way out. The case officially belonged to our team.
Clara watched Lindsayβs face for a moment, her chest still rising and falling a smidge too fast. When she spoke, her voice came out quiet and breathy.
βOkay, likeβ¦ yeah. Hi. Hi, Iβmβ¦ Iβm Claraβ¦β the young lady answered Lindsay. She blinked, swallowed, and kept her eyes on Lindsay, βDid somebodyβ¦ is somebody calling my girlfriend? She rode separate. She was, like, right behind us, I think? I just want to know if sheβs here yet. Or if somebody can tell her whatβs up.β Continued Clara. There was a pause before Clara kept talking. βSorry. Iβm sorry. Iβm justβ I donβt feel right. Somethingβs, likeβ¦ somethingβs really not right, ya know?β
Dr. Lindsay's eyes stayed on Clara's, her face settling into something close to a small, careful smile as she listened. "It's nice to meet you, Clara. I just wish it was under better circumstances."
Lindsay shifted her weight, hands resting lightly on the rail before continuing, "We'll follow up about your girlfriend in just a few minutes, okay? I promise. Right now I just want to focus on you. Is that alright?"
Clara noddedβ a small, quick nod, eyes still locked on Lindsay's face.
Dr. Lindsay's voice stayed calm and even. "Good. So you just told me something doesn't feel right, correct? Tell me a little more about what you're feeling, Clara. Have you ever felt anything like this before? Any fainting episodes like this in the past?"
Clara opened her mouth, then quickly closed it again. Her tongue touched the inside of her bottom lip. Her chest still rose and fell too fast, "Um. No. No, like, never. Never anything like this." Her voice came out a little thinner, "Tonight was the first time I, likeβ the first time I passed out. I've never fainted before in my life. I didn't even know what was happening until I came back or whatever itβs called."
Clara drew a small breath, dropped her eyes to her own hands for a second, then brought them back up, "My heart's been doing weird stuff on and off for like, two days? Maybe three? I don't know. It feels like it skips or something. Or flutters. Like it's not beating right, and then it'll go really fast for a second and then slow down, and then it does it again. And I keep getting these waves of dizziness. Like the room's going sideways for a second, and then it stops." Clara tried to explain. The young patient paused briefly, then continued, "And I keep feeling sick to my stomach. Not throw-up sick but like, just... wrong. Like something isβ I don't know. I just know something's wrong, and I, like, don't have the words for it. I'm sorry I canβt explain it better."
Claraβs eyes went back to Lindsay's. "I just thought I was tired. Or stressed. My girlfriend was the one that called 911β she really really wanted me to come in."
Dr. Lindsayβs expression softened a little, βWell, Iβm glad she did. She made the right call. Thatβs somebody who cares about you.β
Lindsay let that sit a second before going on, βTwo or three days youβve been feeling off, right?β
Clara nodded.
βOkay. A couple more questions from me. Any history of heart problems you know of? Anything in the family? Any anxiety, diagnosed or otherwise? Any drug use? Any medications at all, prescription or over the counter?β Lindsay followed up.
Claraβs eyes flicked up to the ceiling for a split second, like she was checking herself for the answers, then came back to Lindsay. βNo. My heartβs, like, fine, I think. I mean, nobodyβs ever told me anything was wrong with it. And nobody in my family has, like, heart stuff that I can think of.β
Clara paused briefly, then went on, βIβm low-key kinda freaked out right now, ya know? But I donβt have, like, diagnosed anxiety or anything. Iβve never been on meds for anything like that. And, umβ¦ for drugs, I just vape and smoke a little weed sometimes. Thatβs it. I donβt, like, mess with any of the crazy stuff. And nah, no meds. None.β
Dr. Lindsayβs gloved hand came to rest gently on the edge of the table next to Claraβs, close but not touching, βItβs totally normal to feel freaked out right now. I know this is overwhelming, and nobody ever pictures their night ending up here.β
Clara noddedβ small and a little uneven. Her eyes glassed for a second before she blinked it back. βYeah. Yeah, no, Iβ¦ thanks. I really appreciate that.β Claraβs voice was a little thinner than before. βI keep, like, trying to tell myself this is just, like, a really bad panic attack or something. Like thatβs what this is. But it doesnβt feel like that. It feels different. I donβt, likeβ¦ I donβt know how to explain it.β
Dr. Lindsay straightened a little, βOkay, Clara. Hereβs what weβre going to do next. Weβre going to start with some basicsβ Iβm going to have my team draw some blood tests. Blood count, your electrolytes, kidney function, magnesium, a couple of cardiac markers, a thyroid check, a drug test, and a pregnancy test. That last oneβs just routine for any female your age, we run it on everybody. We can pull all of it off the IVs already in your arm, so nobody has to poke you again. Weβre also going to get a 12-lead EKGβ thatβs a full electrical picture of your heart. The leads you have on right now are just for monitoring.β
Lindsay paused, gauging Clara, βI know thatβs a lot of words. The short version isβ weβre trying to get a complete picture of whatβs going on inside you so we can figure out whatβs making your heart do what it's doing. Are you with me?β
Clara let out a little breath that was almost a laugh, except not really, βYeah, no, Iβm with you.β She took a beat. βLike, heads up thoughβ that pregnancy test is gonna come back negative. Ya know, because I have a girlfriendβ¦β A tiny attempted smile, gone almost as fast as it came. βBut, like, run it anyway. I get it.β
Clara swallowed, then continued, βWhatever you guys need to do is cool or whatever. I just want to know whatβs wrong with me.β
Behind her, Nurse Nancy was already pulling tubes from the drawerβ purple top, green top, blue, gold, gray, redβ the little plastic clatter of them stacking in her palm before she stepped to the IV in Claraβs right arm.
Nurse Nancyβs voice came in low and warm, βJust gonna pull these off the line in your right arm, baby. You wonβt feel a thing. Hold still for me.β
Clara nodded.
Nancy worked smoothlyβ uncapping the IV port, threading the vacutainer adapter on with one hand, the other steadying Claraβs forearm with a soft, careful touch. The first tube clicked into place and filled fast, dark red rising up the inside of the container. She switched it out for the next, and the next, the empties going neatly into the tray by her hip. Her free hand kept a thumb resting on the back of Claraβs wrist the whole time, like an anchor of sorts.
βDoing great, sweetheart. Almost there. Two more.β Nancy offered a polite smile.
βMhmm,β Clara breathed.
When the last tube was full, Nancy capped the port and tucked the rack of labeled blood onto the counter behind her, where Nurse Heather quietly gathered them to send over to the lab.
As Nancy stepped back, Dr. Jen the resident moved in from the head of the bed, stethoscope already off her neck. She came around to Claraβs right side and stopped at eye level with her.
βClara? Iβm Dr. Jenβ one of the emergency medicine residents. Iβm just going to listen to your heart and lungs for a minute, okay?β Jen introduced herself.
Clara turned her head a fraction to look at her. βYeah. Yeah, thatβs coolβ¦β
Dr. Jen gave her a small, quick smileβ the kind that came out without fully reaching the eyes, and slid the bell of the stethoscope under the bottom edge of Claraβs sports bra, against the patientβs sternum. The diaphragm pressed gently. Jen listened. Moved itβ left lower sternal border. Listened. Then up to the second intercostal space on the right. Then the left. Each spot for a few heartbeats. The residentβs face stayed neutral but attentive.
βTake a deep breath in for me, Clara. Through your nose, out through your mouth.β Instructed Jen.
Clara complied, the breath catching a little at the top before she let it back out. Jen moved the stethoscope to her backβ sliding under the band of the sports bra at the shoulder blade, then down a few inches, then over to the other side. Same pattern.
βAnd one more for me. Big breath in. Good girl.β Jen continued. She listened a second longer than she needed to, then straightened, the stethoscope coming back up to drape around her neck. She gave Clara another of those quick, neutral nods. βThank you. You did great, Clara.β
Dr. Lindsay glanced toward Nurse Heather. βLetβs get a portable chest x-ray on her.β
Nurse Heather nodded and was already movingβ out through the bay doors and back in under a minute, wheeling the portable unit ahead of her. The machine settled at the foot of the table, the boom arm extended, the head positioned to face Claraβs chest at the right distance and angle.
βClara, hi.β Nurse Heatherβs voice was a tad lower than Lindsayβs and flat in a way that wasnβt unkind. βIβm going to put a plate behind your back so we can get some pictures of your chest. I need you to lean forward for me just a couple inches so I can slide it in. Like youβre trying to sit straighter.β
Clara nodded, pressed her palms flatter to her thighs, and rolled her shoulders forward.
βGood. Hold right there.β Nodded Heather.
Nurse Heather slipped the plate in behind her in a quick, smooth motion, settled it against the padded surface of the table so it sat upright behind Claraβs back, and helped her ease against it. The edge of the plate sat just below the base of her skull and ran down past her ribs to about where her lower back started.
βOkay. Sit up nice and tall for me. Chin up just a bit. Arms relaxed at your sidesβ yep, just like that.β Heather instructed.
Heather crossed back to the portable X-ray unit, adjusted the head half an inch, then looked at the rest of the team.
βX-ray. Everybody clear, please.β Called out Nurse Heather.
The team stepped back, and Heather moved behind the machine with a lead apron on, finger near the trigger.
βDeep breath in for me, Clara. Hold it.β Nurse Heather instructed.
Clara drew the deepest breath she could manage, her eyes pinned on a spot on the ceiling.
βHoldβ¦ holdβ¦β guided Heather.
There was a soft mechanical click, the brief electric hum of the exposure.
βGood girl. Breathe.β Nodded Heather.
Clara let the breath out in a rush.
Heather was already movingβ retrieving the plate from behind Claraβs back with one hand, helping her sit comfortably again with the other, the plate going to the unitβs reader. After a few seconds, there was a soft beep from the machine, and the image was on its way to PACS.
βAll done,β Heather spoke. βThat was easy.β
Clara managed a small, shaky laugh. βYeah. Likeβ¦ that I can do. Just donβt, like, make me think too hard right now. Iβm still a little freaked out, not gonna lie!β
Dr. Sarah pushed off the wall and crossed to the monitor in the corner of the trauma bay, glasses pushed up the bridge of her nose. The chest film came up on the screenβ the gray scale of Claraβs torso resolved in seconds, lungs, heart, ribs, all readable in a glance.
Sarahβs icy blue eyes scanned it once, then scanned it again, but slower. Then a third pass for the details.
βClean,β Sarah spoke without turning around. βHeart size is normal. Mediastinumβs fine. Lung fields are clear bilaterallyβ no fluid, no pneumothorax or hemothorax, no swelling. CP angles are sharp. No bony abnormalities. Sheβs structurally fine.β
Sarah finally turned, addressing Dr. Lindsay, βFrom a film standpoint, nothing here that explains why sheβs throwing PVCs at us.β
Claraβs eyes shifted between Sarah and Lindsay, the way somebody listens to a language they donβt quite speak but is trying to pick out the words that matter.
βSo thatβs, likeβ¦ good? Or?...β Clara asked, trying to clarify.
Dr. Sarahβs gaze flicked to Clara for a half second, the look not quite warm and not quite cold either, βThat means your heart and lungs look structurally normal on the x-ray. No fluid or blood, no blockages, no enlargement. Which is what we like to see.β
Dr. Sarah turned back to Lindsay before Clara could quite catch her breath on it, βWhateverβs going on with her, itβs not coming from the plumbing, so to speak.β
It came without warning. It was a small, sharp pain in the center of Clara's chestβ quick and deep with a hot edge to it. Claraβs shoulders pulled in toward it on reflex, her forehead creasing, the breath she was drawing in cutting off in her throat. One of her hands lifted off her thigh and pressed tightly to her sternum, just around the EKG electrodes, like she could push it back down. "OWW!" A noise escaped from the young ladyβs throat.
The pain faded almost as fast as it appeared. Clara held very still for a few seconds after it passed, eyes wide, her hand still pressed firmly to her chest.
"Oh my god. Oh my god, that⦠what was that?!" Clara asked nervously. She looked at Lindsay first, then at Nancy, then back at Lindsay.
"Like, what was that?! I just feltβ it was like aβ¦ like, sharp. Right here." Clara pressed her palm a little harder against her sternum. "Just for, like, a second. Did you guys see that? On theβ¦ on the screen, did itβ¦ was that something?!" Claraβs voice was raised now, and more breathy. Her chest was rising and falling faster than before. "Is it, likeβ¦ please. Please don't tell me it's getting worse." Clara continued, shaking her head.
Dr. Lindsayβs eyes were already on the monitor before Clara finished asking. The rhythm displayed across the bottom of the screen showed it nowβ the trace surging into a fast, wide cluster of complexes, 7-9 beats stacking on top of each other before pulling itself back to its sinus baseline. The heart rate number rolled upward across the run and stayed elevated when it ended: 158.
βLooks like a run of V-tach,β Sarah stated flatly from her spot near the monitor. βNine beats. Self-terminated. Sheβs back in sinus tach.β
βGot it.β Lindsayβs voice stayed level. Her hand came to the rail again, her body angling closer to Clara without crowding her. βClara, hey. Look at me, cutie. Your heart slipped into a bad rhythm on the monitor, and we caught it. It stopped on its own. Youβre okay right now. Breathe with meβ in through your nose, out through your mouth.β
Nurse Nancy was already there from her side of the table, one warm hand settling lightly on top of Claraβs where it stayed pressed to her sternum. βRight here, baby. Weβre right here with you.β
Claraβs breath came in uneven and fast. Her eyes were huge. Tears rose without quite spilling.
βThatβ¦ that freaked me out. Like, whatever happened just now.β Clara turned her hand over under Nancyβs so her palm was pressed against Nancyβs instead. βThat was soβ¦ like, I felt it. I felt it! Like, all the way through me. Oh godβ¦β
Clara blinked fast a few times, looked at Lindsay, then back at Nancy, then back at Lindsay again. βIsβ¦ is my girlfriend, like, here yet? Is she almost here? Please. Like, please. I just want her here. I want her, like, right now.β Claraβs voice raised a bit, clearly nervous.
Dr. Lindsayβs eyes held Claraβs, her voice soft and even, βI know itβs scary, Clara. I know. But weβre still ahead of this. Youβre doing great. Your girlfriend is on her wayβ sheβll be here as quickly as she can. Right now we just need you to focus on you, okay? On staying with us, on breathing. Can you do that for me?β
Clara nodded, small and quick, then nodded again, like she was trying to convince herself with the second one. Her tears finally tipped over the lower lids and rolled down one of her cheeks. She didnβt wipe them, βYeah. Yeah, Iβ¦ I can do that. Iβm trying. Iβm, like, trying.β
Clara squeezed Nancyβs hand tighter, her eyes stayed on Lindsayβs, βItβs justβ¦ likeβ¦ I really, really donβt feel right. I know I keep saying that, but itβs justβ¦ itβs not the same now. It feels really really different than it did, like, twenty minutes ago. I donβt know how to say it thoughβ¦β
Clara drew a shaky breath, then continued, βLikeβ¦ okay, Iβm not trying to be dramatic, like, I swear Iβm not. But somethingβs, likeβ¦ itβs wrong. Itβs really wrong. Like, I just know. I donβtβ¦ I donβt think Iβm okay. I really donβt think Iβm okay.β
Claraβs voice dropped a bit after a quick pause, βI really need her to get here.β
Dr. Lindsayβs expression softened a fraction, but her voice stayed steady, βAnd sheβll get here, Clara. I promise. Just try to stay calm for us while we work, okay? Thatβs the best thing you can do for yourself right now.β
Clara shook her head. A small, fast, tight shake, her hand still gripping Nancyβs tightly, βNo, likeβ¦ you donβt get it. Somethingβs really, REALLY wrong. Likeβ¦β Her voice caught, and her eyes spilled fresh tears down her cheeks. βLike, I could die wrong. Like that kind of wrongβ¦β
Clara said the word die like it cost her something to get it out.
A short, terrible silence settled across the trauma bay for the split second after. Nurse Nancy moved closer without letting go of Claraβs hand, lowering herself a little until her face was at Claraβs level, her voice dropping into the register she reserved for the worst nights of peopleβs lives. βHey. Hey, look at me, sweetheart. Look at me.β Nancy waited until Clara did. βI hear you. We all hear you. Weβre taking what youβre feeling very seriously, understand? Nobody in this room is brushing you off. Weβve got eyes on every single thing your heartβs doing right now, and Iβm not leaving this side of you. Not for a second. You hear me?β
Nancy held Claraβs gaze, βYouβre not alone in this, hun. Weβre all right here.β
βLetβs get a bedside echo,β Lindsay chimed in, already turning toward the ultrasound machine in the corner of the room. βI want a look at the structure right now and see if the chest x-ray missed anything. And letβs get her on continuous 12-lead, not just monitor leadsβ I want to see what those runs actually look like across all of them.β
βOn it,β Sarah nodded. She was already moving toward the medication drawer. βIβm pushing 2 grams of mag IV while you do the echo. We can revisit amiodarone if she throws another run.β
βYeah. Mag first.β Agreed Lindsay.
Dr. Lindsay wheeled the ultrasound to the right side of the table, the screen waking up under her hand as she settled onto the rolling stool at the level of Claraβs hip. She squeezed a small puddle of conductive gel onto Claraβs chest just below the xiphoid process and her black sports bra, then dropped the probe into it.
βJust an ultrasound of your heart, Clara. Same kind of probe they use on pregnant bellies, just a different angle. This will take me a couple of minutes.β Lindsay kept Clara in the loop.
Clara nodded. Her eyes were fixed on the ceiling now, like that was the only place she could put them and still hold herself together. Nurse Nancy still held her hand. Dr. Sarah stood on her left now, two small ampoules of magnesium sulfate already drawn into the syringe.
βClara, hi. Iβm Dr. Sarahβ one of the attendings tonight. Iβm going to push a medication into your IV thatβs going to help settle your heart down a little. Itβs called magnesium. You might feel warm. You might feel kind of flushed in your face. Maybe a weird taste in your mouth, like metal. Thatβs normal. Donβt worry about it.β
βOkayβ¦ yeahβ¦β Claraβs voice was smaller than before.
Dr. Sarah went to the port on the IV in Claraβs left arm, threaded the syringe in, and started pushing slow and steady, eyes on the monitor at the same time.
Dr. Lindsayβs eyes were on her ultrasound screen, the four chambers of Claraβs heart resolving in clean grayscale, the muscular organ squeezing inward in a tight, coordinated rhythm. She moved through the standard views: parasternal long, parasternal short, apical four-chamberβ her free hand tilting the probe in tiny adjustments, her face neutral and focused. She watched the chambers move. Watched the valves open and close. Watched the pericardium. Looked at the superior vena cava. Came back to the apical four. After a long pass, Lindsay pulled the probe off, βStructurally clean. EF looks like 60ish, easy. No wall motion abnormalities. No effusion or tamponade. Chambers are normal. Valves are normal. Thereβs nothing wrong with the way her heartβs built.β
Lindsay set the probe down and gave Clara a small, steady nod, βThatβs good news. It means the heart itself healthy. Weβre chasing an electrical problem now.β
Claraβs eyes stayed on the ceiling, βThatβs, likeβ¦ thatβs good, right?β
βIt rules some things out.β Lindsay chose her words carefully.
A tear slid down Claraβs face. She heard Lindsay, but didnβt say anything.
It hit harder the next time. Claraβs breath hitched at the back of her throatβ a sound somewhere between a gasp and a small, involuntary cry. Her free hand, the one not gripping Nancyβs, pressed flat against her sternum again, fingers splayed wide. The wince that crossed her face was deeper than the last one. Her eyes shut tight, then snapped open, and the tears just kept coming.
βOH! Nonono, itβsβ¦ oh my god, itβs doing it againβ¦β Clara grimaced.
On the monitor, the rhythm strip went chaotic. A long stretch of PVCs ran across the screen, doubled into couplets, tripled, and then the trace pulled into the wide, ugly run of true V-tachβ the QRSs marching across in fast, deformed succession. 12 beats. 13. Then 14. The heart rate number flashed up into the 170s and held there. The BP cuff cycled, and the number that came up wasnβt quite as friendly as the one before: 92 over 54.
βV-tach,β Sarah noticed, her voice sharper than her last call. β15 beats. 16. Self-terminatingβ¦ for now.β
The rhythm pulled back toward sinus, but the rate didnβt come back down with it. It stayed at 178.
βPressure didnβt bounce back,β Nurse Heather observed, eyes on the cuff readout. βStill 92 over 54.β
Lindsayβs jaw set, βSarah, get amiodarone drawnβ 150 milligrams. Heather, I want the pads on her now, just in case. Jen, get suction and airway set up at the head of the bed.β
βOn it,β all three said in some overlapping order.
βClara?β Lindsay was in tight again, voice the same calm, even one as before. βClara, look at me. I know that hurt. I saw it on the monitor. Weβre going to give you another medication thatβs stronger than the first one, and itβs going to help calm your heart down. Nurse Heather is going to put some sticky pads on your chestβ thatβs just so we have a backup plan if we need it. Youβre not in trouble yet. Stay with me, cutie.β
Clara was breathing much faster, shoulders rising and falling under the EKG wires, her hand still pressed hard to her sternum. βIt was, likeβ¦ it was, likeβ¦ way worse that time. It feltβ¦ it felt huge. I felt it in my whole chest, Iβ¦ likeβ¦β She lost the sentence partway through and just shook her head, eyes pinched shut for a second or two before going on, βIβm scared. Iβm really really fucking scared. Iβm telling you, somethingβs wrong hereβ¦β
The defib pads went on in seconds. Heather peeled the backing off the right anterolateral pad and pressed it against the upper right chest just below the collarbone. Heather then stuck the left lateral pad along the outside of Clara's left rib cage. The cables extended out to the defib unit Sarah pulled in closer to the table.
And then the next wave of symptoms hit again. It came different. It didn't slap her and goβ it landed and stayed. Clara's whole body bent toward it, her chin tucking almost to her chest, a low sound forced out of her that wasn't a wordβ more of a drawn out moan.
"OHHH! Oh no, oh no, oh no, ohβ¦" Clara groaned and moaned. Her legs shifted. Her hips rolled half to one side. Her free hand left her sternum and clawed at the edge of the table, then went back to her chest, then to the table again, like she couldn't decide where to put it and couldn't keep still long enough to figure it out. Her face was bright red and tight, and the breath came out of her in fast, shaking pulls.
"Sustained polymorphic v-tach," Dr. Sarah called out from the monitor. Her voice was in a different gear now. "She's in it. She may not come out."
The rhythm strip rolled past in jagged, ever-changing complexes, the QRSs twisting around the baseline in the unmistakable signature of polymorphic VTβ wide one second, narrow the next, the axis shifting beat to beat. The heart rate number sat in the 190s now. The BP cuff cycled and dropped a worse number than before: 76 over 42.
"Pressure's 76 over 42," Heather shook her head.
"She still has a pulseβ carotid feels thready but it's there." Nancy's fingers were light against the side of Clara's neck. Her other hand still held Clara's.
Clara's eyes opened wide, "I'mβ¦ I'm cold. Oh my god, I'm really, really cold. Likeβ¦ I'm hella cold. Why am Iβ why am Iβ¦ freezing?!"
A hard shudder went through Claraβs petite frame. The anklets on her ankle made a small noise against each other. Clara found Lindsay's face again, "Myβ¦ my heart's gonna stop, isn't it?! Likeβ¦ like, for realβ¦ is it gonna stop beating?! Is my heart gonna stop?!" Her voice cracked open on the last word. "Oh fuck, please, please don't let it stop, pleaseβ¦"
βPush amio fastβ another 150 in,β Lindsay ordered. βDonβt run it over 10, slam it. Magβs not holding her.β
βPushing.β Sarah was already at the IV port in Claraβs left arm, the syringe of amiodarone in her hand, the plunger going down in a steady, controlled run. β150 in. Going in now.β
βNance, draw up another 2 grams of magβ I want it ready,β Lindsay added. βAnd Heather, defib to 100 joules synchronized. Donβt charge yet, but be ready.β
β100 joules synced, confirmed.β Nodded Heather.
The amiodarone went in over maybe twenty secondsβ fast and hard, the kind of push you do when the slow infusion isnβt really an option anymore. Dr. Sarah followed it with a saline flush and stepped back.
The monitor didn't care. The strip kept rollingβ that same beautiful, terrible polymorphic display, the QRSβs writhing on the screen the way Clara was writhing on the table beneath them. The rate number ticked up another step instead of down. 198. 204. The cuff cycled, and the new number came back even uglier than the last: 70 over 38.
βBP 70 over 38,β Heather called from the cuff. βPeripheral pulse barely.β
βCarotid?β Lindsay asked.
βStill palpable,β Nancy answered, fingers still at Claraβs neck. βSheβs perfusing.β
Clara was making sounds that werenβt quite words anymoreβ a low, drawn out groan that broke off and started again, then broke again, her body twisting against the padded surface of the table in small, helpless arcs. Her knees came up and dropped. Her hand fisted in the padded vinyl beside her thigh, white knuckled. The leads stretched and tugged at her chest as she moved. The anklets jangled with every shift.
βOH! Oh my god, oh my god, itβsβ¦ itβs worse, itβs so much worse, likeβ pleaseβ PLEASE make it stop, likeβ¦ please, somebody justβ¦β Clara trailed off, absolutely terrified. She turned her head sharply, eyes finding Nancy through the tears, βIt hurts. IT HURTS. IT HURTS SO BAD, Iβ¦ like, I canβtβ¦ I canβt, I CANβTββ She lost the words, and the sentence collapsed into a thin, awful cry somewhere between a sob and a moan, her hips rolling, her free hand grabbing for the edge of the table and missing, βPleaseβ¦ please donβt let me die. Please, like, Iβmβ¦ Iβm not ready, Iβm not ready, please, like, PLEASE!!!β
Lindsayβs eyes were already moving to Sarah, then to Heather at the defib. Lindsay made the callβ she had to, βSarah, charge to 100. Heather, Nancyβ hands on her while we prep for the shock, both of you. Keep her present, keep her on the table. Iβll tell you when to back away.β
βCharging to 100.β Sarah called out. The defib unit gave a low rising hum as Sarah dialed the settings and pressed the charge.
Nurse Heather moved up onto Claraβs right side and laid a steady hand across her shoulder. Nancy did the same on the left, never letting go of Claraβs hand.
Dr. Lindsay leaned in close, until her face was directly in Claraβs line of sight. Her voice stayed low and steady, but there was a different weight in it now, βClara, I need you to listen to me. Your heart is going into a really dangerous rhythm, and the medicines we just gave you arenβt working fast enough. So weβre going to have to shock your heart with those pads on your chest to try to break the rhythm and get it back to normal. Iβm not going to lie to you, okay? Itβs going to hurt. Itβs going to hurt a lot. But itβs going to be quick, and I really need you to be brave for me. Can you do that for me, cutie?β
Claraβs face crumpled. The sobs came out of her hardβ a single broken, full-bodied gasp that broke into a series of smaller, hitching ones behind it. Her eyes were huge, the dark of her irises swallowed up by how wide her pupils were. The tears poured. βS-shock my heart?! Likeβ¦ like, while Iβmβ while Iβm awake?! Oh my god, OH GOD, NO, LIKEβ NO, PLEASEβ PLEASEβ¦ LIKEββ
Clara shook her head fast, then again, then again, her whole body shaking with the sobbing now. Her free hand groped blindly against the table until her fingers tightened around Nancyβs, knuckles again, βJustβ¦ please just make it stop, please, likeβ¦ make it stop, MAKE IT STOP!!!β
Claraβs voice cracked on the last words. Her eyes flew back to Lindsayβs, glassy and wet, absolutely begging, βPlease donβtβ¦ please donβt do itβ¦ likeβ please, isnβt there something else?!?! Like, isnβt thereβ¦β
Dr. Lindsay didn't take her eyes off Clara's face, but didnβt know what to say to the terrified 19 year old.
"Away the patient," Sarah called from the defib.
Nurses Heather and Nancy both stepped back in the same motion, their hands coming off Clara, palms lifted clear of her body. Lindsay straightened and pulled back half a step. Jen took her hands off the suction and airway setup.
"Everybody clear. Shocking." Sarah announced, her eyes sweeping the room for a second.
The shock was delivered.
Clara's body locked in a single, fast clench, every muscle in her going tight at once. Her shoulders pulled inwards, her whole petite frame compressing in on itself for a split second like one massive, full-body shudder. Her hands snapped into tight fists at her sides.
The sound that came out of her was a ragged, rising yelp that escaped her throat and didn't quite stop where it sounded like it shouldβve. Her left ankle flexed in the spasm as well.
And then her body let go. She slumped forward against herself, her chin still tucked, her hands going from fists to limp open in the same instant, the sob that came out of her after almost a continuation of the yelp.
Every set of eyes in the trauma bay went to the monitor. The rhythm rolled past unchangedβ the same wide, twisting complexes as before. Claraβs heart rate number sat where it sat. Polymorphic VT, untouched.
βCrap,β Sarah grumbled. βStill in VT. No conversion.β
Dr. Lindsayβs jaw worked once. She turned back to Clara without a second of hesitation, then back to Dr. Sarah, βSarah, charge to 150. Same configuration.β
βCharging to 150.β Confirmed Sarah, her fingers on the controls.
Clara was breathing in rapid, shallow, frantic heaves now, her chest rising and falling visibly, her face still red and tear streaked, her hands trembling against the table. Nancyβs hand was back around hers for the time being.
Dr. Lindsay leaned back in close, βClara? Hey, beautiful. Look at me, sweetheart.β
Claraβs eyes dragged up to Lindsayβs. They were red, glassy, and beyond terrified.
βThat shock didnβt break the rhythm. Iβm sorry. We have to go again. Weβre going to bump the settings up a little, but itβs the same thingβ pads, quick shock, done.β Explained Dr. Lindsay.
Claraβs whole face changed, βWhatβ WHAT?! Likeβ¦ AGAIN?! No no no no, like, noβ please, PLEASE, noββ Her head was shaking again. The sobbing came back through the breaths. βIβ¦ I just did it, I just did the thing, like, please, oh my god, please donβtβ¦β
Clara gulped a breath, βCanβt youβ¦ canβt you, like, give me more meds or something?! Like, more of the heart stuff?! PLEASE, like, give me more, give me anything, just please, PLEASE, donβt shock me again!!!β
She turned her head toward Nancy, then back to Lindsay, eyes pleading on both sides, βPlease. Like, please. Iβll beβ Iβll be brave, Iβll, like, Iβll do whatever, justβ¦ not again, please not againβ¦β
βAway the patient,β Sarah called out, not giving anyone a chance to answer the terrified young lady.
Nurses Heather and Nancy stepped back again, hands lifting clear, Lindsay pulling out of the close space at the same time. Jenβs hands came up.
βEverybody clear. Shocking.β Sarah announced.
KA-THUNK!!!
Claraβs mouth shut hard, teeth clacking together, jaw locking in the same instant her whole torso jerked. The sound that came out from between her clenched teeth wasnβt a yelp this timeβ it was lower, harder, a buzzing NNNN held against her teeth as the current ran through her and her whole upper body twitched once, twice, a third smaller time. Her eyes stayed open through it. Wide. Wild. Pinned to the lights above the table.
And then her body unclenched. Clara gaspedβ a huge open-mouthed gulping breath, like surfacing from underwater, and then another, smaller one, and another. Her teeth came apart. Her shoulders dropped. Her hand reached sideways and found Nancyβs again before her eyes did.
When her eyes did move, they went straight to Lindsayβs face, βThβ thatβsβ¦ thatβs it, right?!β Her voice came out broken and shaking. βLikeβ¦ like, no more? No more shocks? Pleaseβ¦β A shuddering breath. βIβ¦ I was brave, right? Like, I was brave for you guys, right? Please, like, please just let that be it. Please. I, likeβ¦ I canβt, likeβ¦ I canβt do that again, please just let that be it!β
Every eye in the room snapped back to the monitor. The monitor displayed the same rhythm. The second shock did absolutely nothing.
βSame rhythm,β Dr. Sarah shook her head, her voice flat.
Dr. Lindsayβs eyes closed for a half second. Then they opened, and she came back down close to Claraβs face, βClara? Sweetheart? Look at me. Iβm so sorryβ that dangerous rhythm is still there. Iβm going to have to shockββ
Claraβs face broke before the word came all the way out, βNo. NONONONO!!!β The sob ripped through her, almost a scream, full-bodied, her shoulders shaking. βNo more. No more, pleaseβ NO MORE!!!β She begged.
Claraβs head whipped from side to side. The tears were coming so fast they ran into her hair, into the EKG leads, down her neck, βIβm soβ¦ Iβm so scared, oh my god, Iβm so scaredβ please, PLEASE, likeβ¦ I donβt want to die. I donβtβ¦ I donβt want to die.. I DONβT WANT TO DIE!!!β
Her voice broke open on the last words, and a sound came out of her that wasnβt quite crying anymoreβ closer to wailing, raw and high. Claraβs free hand grabbed at the air for a second and then went back down on the table. βPLEASEβ¦ please donβtβ pleaseβ¦β
Dr. Lindsayβs hand came to rest gently on the table beside Claraβs hip. She didnβt try to talk over her. She waited a second or two.
βSarah.β Lindsayβs voice was quieter now. βCharge to 200.β
βCharging to 200.β Sarah confirmed.
The team peeled back from the table, gloved hands lifted, bodies pulled away, the space around Clara's body emptying.
"Everybody⦠CLEAR." Dr. Sarah called out after a quick look to ensure nobody was in direct contact with Clara.
THUMP!!!
The sound that came out of Clara was higher than the last. It was a quick, sharp βOHH!!!β forced up out of her chest at the instant the electric current met her body. Her whole body went rigid for the half second the shock ran through her, every muscle in her pulling tight at once. Her shoulders pulled high and locked. Her arms went straight at her sides. Her belly pulled tight. Down at the far end of the table, her bare feet flexed, toes scrunching down hard, the small tendons across the tops of her feet standing up under the skin, the soft, wavy, prominent wrinkles fanning out across the surface of her tiny size 5.5 soles.
Clara relaxed (or as much as she could). Her breath punched out of her in a single hard rush, a thin wet sound coming out behind it that was almost a whimper. Claraβs toes uncurled slowly. Her hands lay where they fellβ one limp open, the other half-curled, fingers twitching a little from fear.
A small, shaky sob worked its way up out of her. Then another. Claraβs chest was rising and falling fast and uneven, her eyes pinned somewhere off to the side, on nothing.
"Oh god. Oh god, oh god, oh godβ¦" Her voice was small and thin, barely there as she babbled. "Isβ¦ is that it?! Likeβ are we done?! Are we done with the shocks?!" The 19 year old hottie asked the team as a fresh tear rolled down her cheek. "Please. PLEASE tell me we're done." Clara continued .
Dr. Sarah's eyes were already on the monitor. Lindsay's went with hers. The display rolled past: same complexes, same axis-shifting polymorphic rhythm that three shocks did literally nothing to.
"No conversion. Itβs still there" Sarah shook her head. Her voice came out tight now in a way it wasn't before.
Dr. Lindsay paused for a second and drew a breath, "Charge to 300. Same configuration."
"Charging to 300." Sarah confirmed, her gloved fingers working the controls on the defib.
The defib's whine started upβ that familiar high-pitched, rising electrical hum that crested upward and upward as the charge built in its capacitors. Clara's eyes snapped wide the moment the sound began.
"Noβ¦ no no noβ no, no, NONONO!!!" The words came out as a single continuous string. Her head began shaking from side to side dramatically. The sobbing came up over her breaths again. "No more. No more, please, noβ NO MORE, NO MORE!!!"
Clara was trying to push back from the sound with her shoulders, like she could put distance between herself and the pads still stuck to her chest if she tried hard enough. Her free hand found the edge of the table and gripped as hard as she possibly could.
"I'm so scared. OH GOD, I'm so scared, I'm so, likeβ¦ IβM SO, SO SCARED!!!" Clara shouted, absolutely terrified. Her eyes flooded again. Her chest was hitching in a way that was nothing but pure panic, "I don't β¦ I don't wanna die. Please. PLEASE don't let me die. Please, likeβ like, don't, don't, pleaseβ¦ please don't let me die!"
βClear the patient, shocking,β Dr. Sarah relayed to the team.
Everyone on our team peeled away from Clara again. Hands lifted, bodies stepped clear of the table.
The 300 joule shock discharged.
The scream came out of Clara short, high, and sharpβ a single sound that started in her throat. Her face contorted in pain all at once: brows pulled in with her forehead creasing, mouth half open, every muscle around her eyes pinched tight. Her petite frame jerked hard against the tableβ a sharp, snapping twitch that ran through her shoulders and her arms and down her ribs and into her hips, not all from the current. Some of it was her body bracing for the current. Some of it came afterward, as the body realized what just hit it.
Immediately after the shock, a sound came up out of her that wasnβt a scream and wasnβt a sobβ something drawn out and shapeless, a high, broken βAHHHHH!β that lost air halfway through and didnβt quite refill. Claraβs eyes flew open and went everywhereβ to the monitor, to the lights, to the IV pole, to the ceiling, to Nancy, to the defib, to Lindsay, to the wall behind Lindsay, to nothing in particular and then back to the monitor again, darting and skipping and never landing for more than a fraction of a second. Her chest was heaving. Her mouth stayed open. The wet shine on her cheeks reflected the overhead lights.
Dr. Jen the residentβs eyes were the first ones to move back to the monitor. She was up at the head of the tableβ quiet, watchful, hands on the suction setup just in case, and she tracked it before anyone else that the strip on the screen still showed the same thing. The rhythm was the same. The rate was pretty much the same. The polymorphic arrhythmia was unchanged.
βHeyβ¦ Iβm still seeing polymorphic v-tach,β Jen relayed discreetly to the team, her voice low and careful.
Dr. Lindsayβs eyes went to the monitor a half second behind her. Sarahβs, too. Confirmation passed between the two attendings in the briefest of looks.
βLetβs go ahead and charge to 360,β Lindsay decided.
βCharging to 360,β Sarah answered with a quick nod.
The defib whined back to life.
Claraβs whole body knew before her mind did. Her shoulders pulled back hard against the table. Her hands snapped up off the surface of the table and then dropped again, like she didnβt know what to do with them. Her eyesβ still wet, still wide, still darting anxiously around the room, found the defib at the side of the table, found Sarahβs hand on it, and stuck there.
βNoβ nononono, NO NO NO!!!β Clara spiraled a bit. Her breathing came apart. It went from fast to shallow and gulping, a panicked pattern she couldnβt seem to slow. Claraβs chest rose and fell in tight, useless heaves. Her shoulders were shaking. Her teeth were chattering, βWhatβ whatβre you guys doing to me?! Likeβ¦ what are you doing?! Pleaseβ¦ PLEASE, what the fuck are you doing?!?!β
A sob ripped through Clara, βJustβ¦ I donβt know, just make it stop, likeβ JUST MAKE IT GO AWAY, PLEASE, somebody, like, please just make it stop, somebodyβ¦β
Her head jerked back and her eyes squeezed shut. Tears made their way out from under her eyelids and ran sideways down her temples into her hair, βI canβtβ I canβt, I JUST CANβT!!!β
Claraβs voice broke completely on the last one. The word came out shredded. She kept repeating it anyway, βI CANβT, I CANβT, I CANβT, I CANβT, likeβ¦ please, PLEASE, PLEASE, I canβt, I canβtβ¦ you donβt get it, likeβ¦I JUST CANβT!!!β
βOkay, everyoneβ¦ CLEAR.β Lindsay called it out that time.
The rest of the team broke clear of Clara once again. Hands, bodies, fingers, all coming up and away.
KA-THUNK!!! The shock discharged.
A sound came up out of Clara that wasnβt a scream this time. It was tighter, smaller, and kinda blockedβ a short, hard choking sound caught somewhere in the back of her throat, like the air she meant to push out got stuck somewhere on the way out. Her eyes flew open and wide for a single stunned second before they closed again. Claraβs right hand snapped up off the table and pressed flat against her chest, between the EKG leads and defib pads, fingers spread wide. Her torso pulled forward involuntarily, ribs curving in, head snapping back for a split second. Claraβs thighs clenched hardβ quads and hamstrings tensing hard against the padded surface of the table, knees jumping with the smallest reflexive twitch.
After the shock, Clara collapsed backward in slow, exhausted stages. Her shoulders eased down. Her chest unclenched. Her right hand stayed pressed to her sternum but went slack against it, fingers slipping flat, the hand riding her chest as it rose and fell. Her thighs released. Her head tipped back against the padded surface of the table, and her eyes shut.
Clara didnβt say anything. The next wave of sobs came up out of her more quietly nowβ small, broken, and traumatized. Tears slid sideways out from under her shut eyelids and ran down into her dark, wavy hair. Her shoulders shook with each breath. Her mouth stayed slightly open. The wet sounds were the only ones she made.
Claraβs hard sobs slowed. Her breathing slowed with themβ still uneven, still wet, but softer, lower in her chest, and a little less wrecked. A small moan slipped out of Clara with the next breath, then again with the one afterβ small, low sounds, more reflex than anything else.
She didnβt open her eyes, βMyβ my girlfriend,β Clara panted, voice scraped down to almost nothing. βWhereβs myβ like, is sheβ¦ is she here yet?β
She swallowed, then continued, βAnd is someone, likeβ is someone gonna call my mom too? I wantβ¦ I wanna see my mom before I die...β
Claraβs eyes opened, but not all the way. Just enough. βI wanna go home. I justβ I just wanna go home. I wanna get outta here...β
Nurse Nancy bent low again. She never let go of Claraβs hand. With her other hand, she brushed a piece of Claraβs bangs back from where it covered one of her eyes, the touch slow, gentle, and careful.
βHey, baby. Hey.β Nancyβs voice was the warmest thing in the bay. βYour girlfriend is here. She got here in the last few minutesβ we got a notification on the tablet. Weβve got her set up in a private waiting room just down the hallβ sheβs safe, sheβs close, and she knows youβre with us. The minute we can bring her back to you, I promise we will. And weβll get on the phone with your mom shortly too, sweetheart. We just have to get you taken care of first. Youβre before so brave for us.β
Nancy squeezed Claraβs hand, βYou just keep breathing for me. Stay with us. Youβre doing so good, hunny.β
Clara's eyes blinked slow. She didn't quite look at Nancyβ her gaze was at some middle distance, like even looking was too much in that moment.
"Godβ¦" Claraβs voice was rough and thin. "Likeβ¦ I thought all this was just anxiety or something. I thought I was, like, having a really bad week. I didn't thinkβ I didn't think I'd have to go through, like, all this. Ya know, the shocks and stuffβ¦" A small, shaky exhale escaped her lips, then she went on, "I'm justβ I'm just so fucking scared. Like, I'm so scared. I didn't think I'd be here tonight. I justβ¦ I didn't, like, think I would die tonightβ¦β
Nurse Nancy's thumb moved in slow, deliberate circles on the back of Clara's hand. The veteran ER nurse didn't rush her. She let the silence after Clara's words settle for a moment, like she was sitting in it with her.
"I know, baby. I know you didn't." Nancyβs voice came out low and steady. "Nobody ever does. Not once in the 23 years I've been doing thisβ not one single person walks in here thinking tonight's the night something crazy like this happens to them. That's not on you, sweetheart. There was no way for you to see this coming. The fact that you thought it might be anxiety? That's a smart, regular thing for a person to think. It doesn't mean you missed anything. It doesn't mean you did anything wrong."
Nancy paused for a second, then kept talking, "And being scared right now? You go ahead and be scared. You're allowed. You've been through something nobody should have to go through. You hear me? We've got you. I've got you. Right here. I'm not going anywhere, baby girl."
Nurse Heatherβs eyes were the first ones on the monitor this time. She held them there a second, then another, like she was making sure before she said it, βLindsay. Same rhythm. No conversion.β
Dr. Lindsayβs jaw set. She took a single slow breath through her nose, βCharge again. 360.β
βCharging to 360.β Dr. Sarah overheard and set the defibs.
The defibrillator whined back into its usual rising hum.
Claraβs body jerked at the sound, knowing another shock was about to come her way. Claraβs eyes flew open. Her chest heaved, tits shaking inside her black sports bra. The cracks in her breathing came apart all over again.
βNo. No, no, no, no, noβ oh my god β OH MY GOD, NO, PLEASE, NO,β Claraβs bare feet kicked out at the far end of the tableβ small, uneven kicks, both heels coming up off the surface and dropping again, showing off the soft, prominent wrinkles along the soles of her size 5.5 feet. Her knees came up. Her free hand grabbed at the air and didnβt find anything.
And then she came apart sideways. Her whole upper body leaned left and crumbled into Nancyβ head dropping against Nancyβs chest, weight folding into her, the EKG and defib wires pulling at angles they werenβt made for. Nancy caught her without flinching. One arm came up around Claraβs back, the other cradled the back of her head, and Nancy held her. Nancyβs cheek came down against the top of Claraβs dark, wavy hair, βIβve got you. Iβve got you, baby. Iβve got you.β
Clara was sobbing into the crook of Nancyβs neck now, full-bodied, shaking uncontrollably, βPlease. Please, likeβ please, please donβt, please donβt shock me again, PLEASE, LIKE β PLEASE, I CANβT, LIKE β I CANβT DO IT ANYMORE!!!β
Claraβs fingers clenched a fistful of the fabric in Nancyβs scrub top, βPlease, likeβ¦ MAKE THEM STOP!!! TELL THEM NO MORE!!!β
βClear the patient.β Sarah called out, her voice a bit firm.
Nancy peeled herself away from Clara, gently, but quickly, easing her back upright on the table, her hands lifting from Claraβs back and Claraβs hair. Claraβs head sagged forward a bit. Nancy stepped back. Heather stepped back. Lindsay pulled clear. Jen lifted her hands.
βEverybody clear. Shocking.β Sarah called out, her voice a little more firm that time.
The sound that came out of Clara this time was small. Just a quick βOOOβ, soft and high-pitched. Her upper body twitched onceβ a single fast pull through her shoulders and her ribs, and then it stopped.
Claraβs head rolled. It rolled slow, slightly sideways, finding the angle gravity wanted it at, coming to rest with one cheek tilted toward her left shoulder. Her eyes were still wide open. Claraβs pupils were huge, the eyelids stayed up, and the eyes themselves were facing somewhere out past the bay, somewhere none of them could followβ there but not seeing.
Claraβs chest didn't rise. It didnβt rise again either. Her hands lay where the shock left themβ one slack against the padded surface of the table, the other still half curled on the opposite side. The anklets on her left ankle lay still against each other. The wet shine on her tear streaked cheeks reflected a little bit in the overhead light.
One thing was unmistakable: Clara was limp on the table.
The team felt something was off before any of them spoke about it. The quality of the air in the bay changed in the space of two seconds. Nancy was the closest. She moved back in without anyone asking her to, the back of her hand brushing the side of Claraβs cheek as she stepped up, then her fingers wrapping around Claraβs slack hand and squeezing, βSweetie? Are you with us?β
Clara didnβt say or do anything.
Nancyβs free hand moved to Claraβs sternum next. She made a tight, knuckled fist and rubbed her knuckles firmly against the bone of Claraβs chest, a deep press in a slow circleβ the kind of stimulus that generally produces some sort of response from a patient. She did it again and pressed harder. She watched Claraβs face the whole time, but Claraβs face did nothing.
Claraβs eyes stayed open. The pupils stayed huge. Her mouth stayed slightly parted. The wet trails on her cheeks didnβt move because her face wasnβt moving. Claraβs head stayed tilted left where gravity left it.
βNo response to painful stimuli.β Nancyβs voice was the steadiest thing in the room.
Dr. Jen the resident moved in from the head of the table. Her fingers settled along the side of Claraβs neck in the soft strip of skin over the carotid. She held them there. She waited a few seconds. She moved her fingers slightly. She waited again. Her eyes flicked up to the monitor and back to her fingers. The rhythm strip on the screen rolled past in that same wide, ragged polymorphic twist that six shocks did nothing to. Jen held the carotid for 10 full seconds.
When the young resident spoke, her voice came out quiet, βSheβs pulseless. Still in polymorphic V-tach.β
The trauma bay shifted into a different mode in less than a second.
βSheβs not perfusing. Lower the table flat. Move.β Lindsayβs voice changedβ different now. It was more firm and intenseβ the same type of voice thatβs run plenty of codes.
Nurse Heather hit the release at the side of the bed, and the back of the trauma table descended in a smooth mechanical drop, the upright bend flattening out, Claraβs body easing down into a supine position. Claraβs head settled. Her arms fell loose at her sides. Her eyes stayed wide open, glassy and somewhere else. The leads tugged a little as her body changed angles.
βCutting her bra,β Sarah called out, already reaching for the trauma shears on an equipment tray nearby. She came back in fast, the shears in her hand, and slid the blade up under the band of the black sports bra and cut clean from the bottom to the neckline in a quick series of snips. The fabric fell open and back to the sides of Claraβs ribcage, leaving her bare from the waist up. The two small piercings through Claraβs nipples reflected some of the bright overhead light. The EKG leads stayed stuck where they were. The defib pads stayed where they were placed.
βPush 1 of epi now, IV,β Lindsay directed, eyes already on the monitor. βAnd another 150 of amio over the same line. Bolus the amio, donβt run it.β
βDrawing the amio,β Nancy confirmed, already at the medication drawer.
βDrawing the epi,β Sarah confirmed beside her.
βHeather, on her chestβ start CPR. Jen, take over airway, bag-valve and get a good seal.β
βOn it.β Nurse Heather was already positioning herself at the side of the table, gloved hands stacking heel-over-heel just over the center of Claraβs sternum, body squaring up over her, shoulders aligning.
Heather wasted no time getting started. The first compression came down hardβ heel of her right hand stacked over the left, arms locked straight, shoulders aligned directly over Claraβs sternum. Claraβs small chest caved deep under the force and snapped back up against Heatherβs palms before she came down again. The next compression went down just as deep. And the next. And the one after that. Claraβs belly bumped and rippled with each one, the rhythm of the resuscitation moving through her petite body. Claraβs small, perky tits bounced and jiggled around wildly as Heather pumped away at her bare, wired up chest.
At the head of the table, Jen pressed the bag valve mask down onto Claraβs face with her left hand, the soft plastic settling over her nose and mouth in a clean, tight seal. Jenβs left hand kept the mask sealed; her gloved fingers ran along the underside of Claraβs jaw and pulled it forward into the rubber, the airway opening. With her right hand, she squeezed the bag slowly in a controlled motion every six seconds or so, enough to lift the chest visibly under Heatherβs hands between compressions. A soft, low whoosh of air came each time. Claraβs head bobbed in a tiny, rhythmic response to the compressions, hair stirring against the padded surface of the table, eyes still wide and open and not blinking, fixed on the row of ceiling tiles overhead.
βEpiβs in,β Sarah spoke, drawing back from the IV port on Claraβs left arm.
βAmioβs in,β Nancy added, withdrawing her own syringe from the port on the right.
Dr. Lindsay stood at the foot of the table. Her eyes ran the roomβ Heatherβs count, Jenβs bagging, the monitor, the IV lines, the team, back to Claraβs face, back to the monitor before speaking, βGood. Letβs do a two minute cycle. I want us to start off strong on this one.β
The first two minute cycle of CPR went the way those cycles always seem toβ too fast and too slow at the same time. Heather hammered out roughly 200 compressions across it. Jen got somewhere around 20 breaths in. Sarah and Nancy ran the meds and watched the line. Lindsay watched everything and everyone.
"Hold compressions," Lindsay instructed the team. "Pulse and rhythm check."
Nurse Heather lifted her gloved hands off of Claraβs sternum and stepped back half a step, breathing a little harder now. Jen paused the bag. Nancy's fingers slid to Clara's carotid one more time, "No pulse," Nancy shook her head, looking towards Lindsay.
The strip on the screen rolled past in the same ragged polymorphic twist that ran across it pretty much all night. "Still in VT," Sarah called out from the monitor.
Dr. Lindsay didn't pause, "Letβs hit her at 200. Unsynced."
"Charging to 200. Unsynchronized." Dr. Sarah nodded as she moved to the controls for the defibrillator.
In anticipation of the shock, Heather pulled clear, gloved hands lifted. Jen retracted the bag valve mask up off Clara's face and held it. Nancy took her fingers off Claraβs carotid and stepped away. Sarah stayed at the defib. Lindsay was already at the foot of the table.
THUMP!!!
A brief, limp twitch ran through Claraβs chest and shoulders. Her arms gave a small reflexive jump and settled. Her bare feet kicked a single short kick at the far end of the tableβ half a kick, no real force behind it, and went still again, the soles of her cute size 5.5 feet wrinkling again.
Claraβs head turned a smidge to the left. Her eyes stayed wide pen, staring straight up at the ceiling tiles, glassy and unmoving.
The monitor didn't bother changingβ of course it didnβt.
Sarah shook her head, βNo conversion.β
βCharge to 300. Same thing.β Lindsay ordered.
The rising, high-pitched sound built faster this time, the team already in their cleared positions.
βOkay. Everyoneβ¦ CLEAR.β Lindsayβs voice surged as the next shock was delivered.
That one hit Clara differently. Claraβs chest shot up off the table, back arching hard, shoulders pulling back, small perky tits bouncing wildly, hips lifting clean off the padding in a single sharp upward bow, every muscle along the front of her body utilized at once. Clara held there, a stiff, locked arc for several seconds. The pads on her chest stayed stuck. The leads stretched a little bit. Her left foot pointed and held.
Then she dropped. Claraβs back came down against the padded surface in an ungraceful, weighted thump. Her arms slapped down at her sides. Her head rolled, finding its tilt to the left again. Her eyes were still wide open.
Dr. Sarahβs eyes flicked to the monitor, βStill polymorphic VT. No conversion.β
Lindsay didnβt break, βResume CPR. Heather, back on her chest. Jen, back on the bag.β
βOn it.β Heather was already in position, her hands stacking heel over heel onto Claraβs sternum, body squaring up over her. Her first compression came down hard. Her second came down just as hard. The rhythm picked back up where she left it prior to the shocks.
Dr. Jen the resident brought the bag valve mask back down onto Claraβs face, sealed it, and squeezed. The soft whoosh of air started up again.
The second cycle of CPR went by even faster than the first (or it at least felt that way). Nurse Heather pounded out another stretch of compressions, sweat starting to show along her hairline. Dr. Jen kept the bag going. Sarah and Nancy stood at the IV lines, ready for whatever came next. Lindsay called the time the next two minutes was up, βHold compressions. Pulse and rhythm check."
Nurse Heather lifted. Jen paused the bag. Nancy went back to the carotid.
"No pulse, Linds,β Nancy shook her head. The strip showed exactly what it kept showing. Polymorphic VT, ragged and tireless.
"No change," Dr. Sarah confirmed from the monitor.
"Okay, this rhythm just wonβt budge. Letβs go again at 360.β Lindsay responded.
The team wasted no time, delivering that next shock promptly.
Claraβs petite frame was tossed around effortlessly on the table, every muscle firing seemingly all at once. Her torso went into something that looked less like a single seize and more like a hard, drawn-out shiverβ shoulders, ribs, belly all shaking under the current, her small perky tits almost vibrating as the current worked its way through her body.
At the far end of the table, Claraβs bare feet kicked hardβ heels coming up off the padded surface and slamming back down again four or five times in succession, the soft, wavy, deep wrinkles fanning out across the surface of her small, size 5.5 soles.
Clara dropped back to stillness in a tumbled way, body settling unevenlyβ one shoulder lower than the other, one hand turned inward, her left foot still slightly rolled to the side. Her eyes stayed wide open. Her head stayed turnedβ that time to the right.
Dr. Sarah's eyes went back to the monitor, but zhe didn't speak right away. Then: "Rhythm changeβ¦β
Dr. Lindsay's head came up.
"V-fib," Sarah spoke. "She's in V-fib now..."
Dr. Lindsay's voice came faster now, "I need another 1 of epi. Another 150 of amio. And give me 1 of atropine while we're at itβ I want everything in her. Push them through the right line."
"Pulling epi and amio," Nancy confirmed.
"Atropine drawing," Sarah added.
"Jenβ I want her tubed. 7.0 ET. Get suction ready just in case. Heather, keep compressions going through it. We'll hold for the pass only." Lindsay continued.
"Okay." Jen was already moving.
The resident handed the bag valve mask off into Nancy's free hand and stepped fully up to the head of the table. She pulled the laryngoscope handle from the airway tray to her left and clicked the blade into place, the small light at the tip blinking on. Nurse Heather kept hammering compressions at her leftβ the table itself shifted a little under each one, Clara's head bobbing along in sync.
Dr. Jen tucked her right hand under the back of Clara's neck and tipped her head back, her slack mouth opening wider, lips parting, her loose tongue settling toward the back of the throat. With her left hand, Jen introduced the curved blade of the laryngoscope along the right side of Clara's tongue, then swept the tongue to the left as the blade slid into the midline of the mouth, the tip seating cleanly into the vallecula at the base of the tongue. Jen lifted up and away along the long axis of the handleβ not levering, the way Lindsay hammered into her during sims a hundred times. The epiglottis came up next. Behind it: the small triangle of the glottic opening, the pale arch of the vocal cords on either side, the line of the airway beyond.
"I have cords." Jen called out.
"Okay, good. Pause compressions," Lindsay nodded.
Nurse Heather lifted off Clara's chest, awaiting further instruction.
Dr. Jen reached for the 7.0 endotracheal tube on the trayβ straight, clear, the stylet already curved through it, and threaded it down through the right side of Clara's mouth past the laryngoscope blade, then through the cords. She watched the cuff disappear past the white arch and then a centimeter or so beyond.
"Cuff through. Holding at 22 at the lip." Jen called out to Lindsay. Jen held the tube with her right hand to keep it from migrating and pulled the stylet free with her left, then unclipped the inflating syringe and pushed air into the pilot balloon at the proximal end of the tube. 5 ccβs. The cuff inflated. She popped the bag valve free of the mask and clicked it directly onto the end of the ET tube.
"Bagging through the tube now," Jen spoke, the bag squeezing in her right hand, the soft whoosh that came back this time a little differentβ cleaner and deeper, Claraβs chest rising in a more even, fuller bow. Nancy moved up with the stethoscope and listened over the right chest, then the left, then the epigastrium, "Equal bilateral. No gastric. Tubeβs in.β
"Good. Push the meds," Lindsay ordered.
Sarah and Nancy turned to the IVs at the same time. The syringes went into the ports across the next several secondsβ epinephrine, amiodarone, atropine, each pushed and flushed clean behind it.
The next five minutes folded into themselves. Three more defibrillator shocks were sent through Clara's bodyβ all at 360 joules. More epi went in. Another bolus of amio. Another atropine somewhere in the mix. Sodium bicarbonate at some point. Nurse Heather pounded through another full cycle, then a partial, before Sarah quietly tagged in and took over compressions for the next two minutes so Heather could catch her breath, shake her arms out, and hop back in. Jen kept bagging through the tube. Nancy ran from the medication cart to the monitor and back like she was holding both ends of a thread.
The clock on the wall moved in a way that didn't seem to match what they were doing. Time seemed to be dragging on and speeding up simultaneously.
And on the screen, the line just kept being the line. Coarse V-fib. Disorganized, fast, ragged, and unmistakable to anyone who knew what they were looking at. The QRSs never reassembled themselves. The amplitude rose and fell, fine in one stretch, coarser in the next, but the rhythm never resolved into anything that looked like it was trying to come back.
The trauma bay was a bit quieter now. Not silentβ Sarahβs count was still going under everything, the rhythmic thudthudthud of CPR heard, Lindsay still called orders in the same calm, even voice. Nobody made small comments. Nobody asked unnecessary questions. The team moved with the muscle memory of people who all knew exactly what they were doing.
"Charge to 360, we need to shock her again.β Lindsay told the team.
The team quickly prepped for the next shock and peeled clear.
This shock caused Clara's body to twitch sharply in a single tight pull through her shoulders and her chest, her small perky tits with pierced nipples bouncing around a bit. Her arms snapped close to her ribs for a split second. Down at the far end of the table, her toes curledβ quick, tight, and involuntary, the bright white nail polish on her toes visible.
Dr. Sarah's eyes went to the monitor before the shock was fully done, "No change. Still V-fib."
"Again at 360. Charge the pads." Lindsay shook her head.
The next shock moved Clara less in the body and more in the head. Clara's shoulders barely lifted off the tableβ a little jerk, almost gentle, like a thing trying to wake up and failing. But her head turned rolled with the shock, slow and sideways, coming to rest with her cheek tipped toward her right shoulder. Claraβs eyes stayed open through the whole motion wide and glassy. They didn't blink. They didn't change.
Sarah looked, "No change. Sheβs still V-fib."
Following that shock, the next ten minutes of the code went by without much change. Five more defibrillations. More epi. More amio until they reached the ceiling on it. More chest compressions, traded off again, Heather and Sarah swapping every two minutes or so, Lindsay stepping in once herself when Sarah needed thirty seconds to breathe. Jen kept bagging through the tube. Coarse V-fib remained the rhythm despite everything.
Clara's body was beginning to show signs associated with prolonged cardiac arrest. The flush from the panic earlier was gone, her face now ghastly pale. Her lips, when Jen looked at them up close, were taking on a faint purplish color, cyanosis creeping in.
Between ambu bag squeezes, Dr. Jen reached for the penlight clipped to her scrub pocket and clicked it on. She brought it up close to Clara's right eye first. The light fell across the wide dark of the pupil. It stayed wideβ no reaction. Jen repeated the same thing in the left eye, but that pupil was also fixed and dilated. Jen brought the light back to the right and held it there for a longer second, watching, willing it. Claraβs pupil didn't budge, remaining totally blown. Dr. Jen clicked the penlight off and slid the pen light back into her scrub pocket. "Dr. Lindsayβ¦ her pupils are fixed and dilated bilaterally,β she told Lindsay who was at the far end of the table.
Dr. Lindsay caught Jen's words and gave her a single small nodβ the kind that meant heard, understood, keep going. She didn't acknowledge it past that. "Resume compressions. Another epi, 1 milligram . And another half amp of bicarb behind it." Lindsay told the team.
Dr. Sarah was already drawing it before Lindsay finished the order.
Nurse Heather came back down onto Clara's chest, gloved hands stacking in the same spot they kept finding for the better part of twenty minutes now, and started the grim rhythm again. The downstrokes came as deep as they did at the beginning, which was somethingβ Heather kept her arms from shortening the way arms tended to shorten in long codes, but the skin under her palms wasn't quite the same skin from the beginning. A bruise was forming in the center of Clara's chest, a dark mottled flowering of purples and reds spreading outward from the sternum, the kind of bruise that forms after roughly 20 minutes of pumping away at a bare chest. The defib pads at the edges of the discoloration sat relatively undisturbed. Claraβs nipple piercings caught the light again, her nipples fading a bit in color from lack of proper circulation.
Clara's eyes still weren't closed despite all the resuscitation efforts sheβs endured up to that point. They stayed wide open and glazed over, unmoving except for the small involuntary movement her whole head made with every downstroke Heather gave herβ bobbing a fraction of an inch with each compression, hair stirring against the pad of the table, a tiny rhythmic dip and rise like a thing being rocked.
Nurse Nancy pushed the epi. Dr. Sarah followed it with the bicarb.
Dr. Lindsay's eyes were on the monitor. Her jaw clenched a little, then unset. She didn't say what she was thinking. None of them did. But in reality, the whole team knew how Claraβs code was going to go and in all likelihood.
Several more minutes flew by without any change. Three more shocks went into Claraβ three more controlled jolts of electricity passed between the pads. The last meds drifted out into circulation that the compressions kept moving for her, since her own heart wasn't moving anything. CPR kept turning over in two minute cycles. The rhythmic thudthudthud of Nurse Heather's gloved hands against Clara's bare chest sounded almost like a bleak metronome of sorts.
Around it, the noise that wasn't compressions thinned to almost nothing. The occasional monitor alarm chirpedβ a low electronic screech when the pulse ox lost its read for a few seconds, a different tone when the BP cuff cycled and couldn't find a number. Nobody startled at those anymore. Nobody talked over them. The team spoke more economically: a confirmation when a med went in, a "still V-fib" when Sarah glanced at the screen, a quiet "swap" when somebody else stepped beside Heather to take compressions for a cycle. That was pretty much it. The trauma bay was almost too quiet, given what was happening in it.
Dr. Lindsay stood at the foot of the table. Her bluish-gray eyes were on the monitor and stayed there. Her hand rested on the end of the table, not far from one of Claraβs feet. Her face was the sameβ composed, professional, and unhurried, but something behind it was settled in a way it wasn't a several minutes earlier.
When the current CPR cycle ran its course, Lindsay didn't let the next one begin. She raised her hand a little, just enough for Nurse Heather to catch the motion. "Hold compressions, please," Dr. Lindsay ordered Heather, and by extension, the rest of the team.
Nurse Heather's hands lifted off Clara's chest in the same instant Lindsay finished speaking. She took a half step back from the table, shoulders rolling once as she was able to take a little break after all that CPR.
Up at the head of the table, Jen reached down to the connector where the bag valve met the end of the endotracheal tube. She twisted it free with a small, careful motion of her fingers with a quiet plastic click as the fitting came apart, then a small hiss of air leaving the bag as it disengaged. She set the bag down on the table beside Clara's head.
Every set of eyes in the room moved to Lindsay. The pause that followed was the kind of pause that carried a heavier weight to itβ not so much waiting as bracing. Dr. Sarah looked at her over the rim of her glasses. Nancy looked up from where she still stood on Clara's left side. Heather looked straight at her. Jen was already looking at her too.
Dr. Lindsay let her own eyes pass slowly across each of them. Then she came back to the table and brought them down on Claraβ on her open eyes, on her parted mouth around the ET tube, on the dark nasty bruising at the center of her chest, and on the small, still feet at the far end of the table where some anklets remained around one ankle.
Lindsay drew a small, steady breath, then began speaking, "Alright, everyone. We've been working on Clara for nearly half an hour now, and we haven't been able to convert her from V-fib at any point during our efforts. I don't believe we have the ability to produce a meaningful recovery for her anymore. So I'm going to go ahead and call it."
Dr. Lindsay glanced at the clock on the wall, "Time of death, 22:31. Thank you all for your efforts tonight."
The team seamlessly transitioned into post-code care.
Dr. Jen reached up behind the head of the table and clicked off the heart monitor. The bay went quieter again, but now it was more of an eerie quiet.
Nurse Heather stepped to the right side of the table and started working the EKG wires loose. One at a time, she unsnapped each lead from the small circular electrode it was clipped toβ pop, pop, pop, the soft plastic clicks running across the torso and then back across the lower chestβ leaving the round white stickers themselves stuck to Clara's skin where they were. The dangling ends of the leads she gathered back toward the monitor, draping them across the head of the table in a small, neat tangle.
Nurse Nancy worked the IVs. She peeled back the clear tegaderm at the right antecubital fold first, gentle even though there was no longer any reason to be gentle, then drew the 18 gauge catheter out cleanly. A tiny bubble of dark blood welled up at the puncture site and stayed there, no pressure behind it to push it any further. She pressed a small square of gauze over it anyway, the way a nurse does. She moved to the left arm and did the same.
Dr. Sarah unwound the BP cuff from Clara's left bicep, the long stretch of velcro coming apart with the soft, low riiip the velcro of those cuffs always made, and rolled the cuff back up into itself and set it onto the counter on the side of the room.
Dr. Lindsay stepped in from the foot of the table and came around to Clara's right side. She reached down and slid the pulse oximeter free of Clara's right index finger with a small careful pinch of its sides, the spring releasing soundlessly, and laid the small device aside on the table. Clara's hand, freed of it, stayed exactly where it was. Lindsay's fingers brushed the back of Clara's hand for a half second.
Nurse Heather stepped back over to Clara's chest. She slid two fingers under the edge of the right defib pad and lifted slowly, peeling it back the way you peel something that wasnβt really made to be ripped, the adhesive giving up in a slow, smooth release, leaving a faint pink rectangle in its outline where the pad sat for the better part of the last little while. The cable on the back end of the pad followed it up and out of the way. She did the same with the left pad. Two pink remnants of the pads sat on Claraβs bare chest, framing the bruise over her sternum in a way nobody wanted to look at for too long.
Nurse Nancy moved up to Clara's face. Her hand was unhurried as she gently shut Claraβs eyes for the final time. Nancy stood there for a moment longer than the gesture required, her thumb resting against Clara's temple, before she let her hand fall.
Dr. Lindsay pulled a toe tag and a black pen from the wall-mounted dispenser on her way back over. She filled out the small cardstock tag against the back of the patient's chart at the foot of the tableβ name, date of birth, medical record number, the time and date of deathβ her handwriting clean and unhurried, the way it always was. She finished. She tied the string of the tag to the big toe of Clara's left foot with two careful loops. The card hung against the side of Clara's left foot, and the size of the card and the size of the foot were nearly the same. The toe tag brushed up against the hot, wrinkled sole of Claraβs left foot as Lindsay finished up.
Dr. Jen reached for the folded white sheet on the back counter and brought it to the head of the table. Dr. Sarah came around to the foot. They opened it togetherβ a single shake-out, the fabric flaring above Clara in a brief soft cloud, and let it settle. They smoothed it down as it dropped. The sheet covered her feet first, then her legs, then her hips and her bruised chest and her shoulders, then lastly her face. Dr. Jen pulled the top edge just over the crown of her head; Sarah pulled the bottom edge straight across the tops of her feet. The two of them tucked the sides under the curve of her body at the same moment, the way they have done many times before, and will likely again at some point.
The sheet settled with Clara under it. Just like that, 19 year old Clara Khai became the next hottie to find herself toe tagged and under a sheet in our emergency department.

















