[flashback] sick day
A decade isn't enough time for illnesses to evolve from their pre-freeze state. So many of them start the same way they always have: with a chill. A lot of times, people don't even know they're sick. What's feeling a little colder than usual, needing to curl up a little tighter under your allotted blanket?
So Curtis doesn't know, for a good forty-eight hours, until the shivering doesn't quit even after Gilliam loans him two more blankets. As soon as Tanya feels his forehead, he's whisked away to the very back of the Tail, stumbling a little as the train heaves along the tracks. Everything's tilted just a little too far off-kilter, and weaves just a little too sharply whenever they go over a bump. He's grateful when he finally has a chance to sit down.
...Actually, maybe he'll lie down for a bit. Yeah. Just a couple minutes.
So Curtis doesn't know, for a good forty-eight hours, until the shivering doesn't quit even after Gilliam loans him two more blankets. As soon as Tanya feels his forehead, he's whisked away to the very back of the Tail, stumbling a little as the train heaves along the tracks. Everything's tilted just a little too far off-kilter, and weaves just a little too sharply whenever they go over a bump. He's grateful when he finally has a chance to sit down.
...Actually, maybe he'll lie down for a bit. Yeah. Just a couple minutes.
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Edgar glowers at the back of the man ahead of them for a moment, then down at his unbitten protein block.
And turns, and holds it out to Evie. "Here. In case they won't help for free."
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She fixes him with a firm look, much like the one she gave him when he first tried to barge into the sick room.
"That's yours. I won't take it."
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"Fine," she says at last, in a way that sounds more like you have got to be fucking kidding me.
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"Okay," he says. "... Now? Or wait and see if, if he's better later?"
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(Out-stubborned by a ten-year-old. God, she's getting soft.)
"Later," she says. "Once he's gotten enough rest. I'll ask them an hour or two before morning headcount."
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He doesn't bother saying you'll find me first?; he has no intention of letting her out of his sight before then.
They're almost back to the infirmary area by now.
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He expects her to say no, but that's all right; it'll give him an extra edge to ask if he can come in and say goodnight to Curtis.
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Something deep in the pit of his stomach is tight and shivering, and he wants to yell at the top of his lungs and hit something until Curtis is safe, but you can't hit a fever.
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"Go ahead," Evie murmurs.
He's going to be okay.
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"Maybe ..."
Slowly, with deep reluctance: "Maybe I should just let him sleep, though."
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If he wants.
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"G'night, Curtis," he whispers. "You'll feel better soon, okay?"
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"Okay," says Evie, no louder. "You can come back to see him tomorrow morning, all right?"
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And then turns without a word to Evie and pushes roughly through the curtain, leaving it swinging in his wake.
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There are other people in the tail who can watch after Edgar while he's this upset. Right now, she needs to watch after her patient.
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Curtis sleeps fitfully, drifting in and out, alternately kicking off the blankets and tugging them close. The nausea spikes at a few points, but never gets bad enough to require use of the bowl Evie placed next to his bed. Guess that's a good thing.
In his dreams, the train melts like ice under a heat lamp, flooding the Tail, drowning him before he can reach Edgar. The Front escapes. They always escape. Wilford looks like nobody he can remember, and smiles as he drifts away on a boat constructed of corpses.
The next morning, Evie gently shakes him awake to break the news.
Half an hour later, leaning heavily on her shoulder, Curtis shuffles from the infirmary to make his way to head count.
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Edgar slept late this morning, with nobody on the bunk above to rouse him; he's thrashing into his too-large jacket while hurrying down the narrow aisle between bunks, making for the infirmary.
He gets to the row just in time to see Curtis and Evie emerge, and puts on a burst of speed.
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