creating, I wouldn't have been able to forgive myself for letting it fall into the wrong hands either.'
'What is this? Is this some kind of sermon? I know good and well that this technology shouldn't fall into the wrong hands—
'Very good, Anson-—' Einstein started.
'Stop interrupting me,' I shouted. 'I didn't ask to be put into that life-or-death situation. Johnny Cache and his employers put us there. They killed my countrymen not me! I was a pawn! But, Tabitha and I stopped the bastards! So there! I think I'm done with you and your philosophical and utopian views.' I paused for air. I noticed Einstein was smiling back at me. I was getting angry and my adrenaline was starting to flow—If I were Bruce Banner, I'd have turned green and started smashing shit about then.
'Very good, Anson. I don't believe that you need me anymore either. You will do just fine.' Instead of turning into a purple emu and flying away this time, he slid down the helmet of his EMU and locked it into place; EMU not emu this time. 'Just fine,' he said as he opened my closet door. 'Perhaps you will be able to sleep now.'
Funny that the whole time he was sitting there talking to me, I didn't notice that he was wearing a spacesuit. Somehow, it just seemed right. He was wearing an EMU, not becoming an emu. My mind was trying to tell me something but I wasn't sure what.
'Hey wait!' I shouted to him. 'You aren't here and this ain't real is it?'
'Of course I'm real, Anson,' he paused at the closet door. 'I'm as real as your subconscious and I'm as real as your need to be humble. You did all of this amazing science and engineering and will not admit that to yourself. Perhaps you created me in your dreams to tell you what you wouldn't tell yourself. But you will not be needing me any longer, I think.'
Then he stepped into the airlock in my closet and exited out into space. A gush of air hit me in the face as the airlock cycled. He was gone.
Then the lights blinked off, then on, and then off and on again. I cold hear a loud repetitive noise and then something hit me hard in the chest. It felt like a truck.
'Dr. Clemons, can you hear me?' A fourth man that I had never met was looking down at me.
'I have a pulse!' I could hear in the background.
'The epinephrine is working. How much farther to the hospital?' he asked.
'Pilot says four minutes.'
'It'd better be two!' the man replied. Then he turned from me to Tabitha, 'What's his blood type?'
'O-positive.' She said.
I tried to say thanks to them but I still couldn't move or speak for some reason. The head medic turned back to me.
'Dr. Clemons if you can hear me I want you to blink your eyes.' He said.
I blinked at him twice.
'Oh Anson!' Tabitha continued to cry.
Then I started feeling slightly better. Probably the adrenaline or whatever this was in my arm. I noticed an I.V. hanging from the roof of the helicopter and I felt like I would be able to speak so I tried. Nothing happened.
'Don't try to speak, Anson!' Tabitha shouted.
'Dr. Clemons you have a tube in your throat. Don't try to speak. Do you understand? If so blink twice.'
I blinked twice. Then I started feeling weak again. The adrenaline probably wouldn't hold me for long. I was here though and I was damned sure going to stay, no matter how much it hurt or how hard it was to stay awake. Besides, there were a lot of things left for me to do. Tabitha squeezed my hand. The feeling had returned to my fingers. It wasn't very long before I could tell that the helicopter was descending. Tabitha continued to lock eyes with me. Or rather, eye with me. Her one eye was still swollen shut.
Tabitha held my hand all the way from the helipad to the elevator. While in the elevator she leaned down and kissed my cheek. The elevator doors opened and she followed beside me until we hit the operating room. A gentleman wearing scrubs told her that she needed to come with him.
'I want to know how—' Tabitha was saying as the doors closed. Once they closed, I could no longer hear her voice.
'Okay ready to move him on three,' one of the men in scrubs said. 'One, two, three!' They heaved me onto a table. I saw a lady inject something into my I.V.
'Don't worry sir, you are going to be fine. . . .' Everything went black again.
CHAPTER 14
Sorry about that, General,' Tabitha said as she leaned her cane against my bed and saluted him.
'At ease, Colonel Ames.' The general approached my bed and looked down at me with a stern smile. He offered me his right hand. 'It is good to meet you, Dr. Clemons. I'm General Bracken.'
'Hell . . . unh . . .
'He's still having trouble speaking, sir. He had a tube down his throat and into his lungs for more than a day now. He just got it removed about an hour ago.' Tabitha explained my situation to him. It was the first time I was