Easy As Falling Off A Bike pt 1760

The Daily Dormouse.
(aka Bike)
Part 1760
by Angharad

Copyright © 2012 Angharad
All Rights Reserved.
  
-Dormouse-001.jpg

Tuesday arrived, the kids were having a great time on Menorca and sent us the pictures to prove it. I was still having breathing difficulties and I began to wonder if I’d developed asthma. I called Dr Smith and he asked me to drop by at the end of his surgery.

“You’ve still got an infection there, you haven’t been overdoing it, have you?”

“No just gentle exercise when I can stay awake.”

“I’m going to give you some more antibiotics, but I want a sample of sputum and some blood.” I managed to cough up some muck from my rather tender lungs and he took some of my precious red stuff. I cashed the prescription on the way home and took one of the antibiotics as soon as I got home.

David had made us a delicious lunch again and I went off to sleep watching Brad Wiggins do what he does best, and incidentally adding to his lead in the Tour. Catherine was cuddled into me and we were both snoring according to David.

Just walking round the drive seemed to exhaust me and I went to bed for an hour before Simon came home with Sammi, who wanted to tell me that the bank wanted to develop her software idea and were bringing in a consultant to work with her. I was too tired to listen to her and they had quite a problem waking me. I zonked again and Si sent for the doctor.

It looked as if I was having a reaction to his pills and he sent me to hospital–you can guess which one. I ended up being admitted, but by that time I was practically unconscious and they were hitting me with big shots of adrenalin again. Once again the chest physician came to see me and I ended up on drips.

“What’s the prognosis?” I croaked at him.

“You have a chest infection and I suspect a developing pleurisy.”

“So that’s why it hurts to breathe?”

“Quite. Now before I do anything else are you prepared to stay here until we actually get it sorted this time?”

“Do I have a choice?” I croaked.

“Yes, you can go and die somewhere or stay here and get better; but if you stay here, you have to follow instructions...”

I suspect he was still talking, but a wave of tiredness engulfed me and I suppose I fell asleep. I slept on and off for the next day–all of it. So while Cadel Evans was slipping backwards down the CG in the mountains, I was zonked over a drip in Portsmouth and apparently had a temperature of over a hundred. I was aware of the pain in my chest each time I tried to breathe but not much else–except a peculiar dream, which I think I can attribute to either the drugs or the fever.

I was crossing a desert, riding a giant space hopper–yeah one of those orange things popular with kids about the time of Jesus. He was there actually, travelling in the opposite direction, only his hopper was green. You think I’m making this up? Ha, I’ll bet you do. Anyway, after waving to each other we set off in opposite directions. I had no idea where I was going as we don’t have many deserts near Portsmouth, unless you include Gun Wharf Quay, which is primarily categorised as a cultural desert, and I was hopping up sand dunes on this inflated piece of orange plastic. However, it seemed to know, so I followed it–like I had a choice. It was jolly hot, the sun beat down on me and the orange bikini I was wearing didn’t afford much protection from its radiation. I could feel myself turning quite red, which apart from being uncomfortable, clashed like hell with the bikini.

I called to it to stop. “What for?” said the face on the front of it–you remember those inane grins they had.

“I’m hot, tired and burning and need a drink of water.”

“Oh why didn’t you say?” replied the hopper. Immediately, a small occasional table appeared by the side of us and I took the drink it held and gulped it down–it was cold, sweet water. I burped loudly and the hopper gave me a look of disdain.

I took the sun lotion from the table and smeared it liberally all over myself. “Was that Jesus we saw earlier?” I asked my trusty steed.

“I didn’t see him,” it replied, “gold hopper?”

“No, a green one.”

“No that was Paul.”

“Paul who?” I enquired.

“Saint Paul you lot call him, though they reckon if Jesus actually catches up with him there’ll be hell to pay.”

“They both go riding across the desert on space hoppers all the time?”

“Yeah, what of it?”

“Um–nothing,” this was crazy even for one of my dreams.

I finished with the lotion and remounted the orange plastic. “Where are we going?”

“You’ll see soon enough.”

It seemed to take forever, and during this period we did pass someone on a gold hopper. I didn’t stop to get his autograph however as my steed was bouncing along at a gallop–is that possible? It seemed to have been then it screeched to a halt outside an ancient building made of marble blocks which glistened in the sunlight.

“You’ll need these,” said the hopper and a long dress like thing appeared and a scarf. “Cover your head, and don’t speak until spoken to. Got it?”

I nodded and pulled the dress over my head, it was something like a cross between a nightshirt and a medieval dress in linen. I drew the scarf around my head and walked through the door which seemed to anticipate me and opened before me.

Inside was a beautiful courtyard with fountains and masses of flowers and shrubs and to one side a large cypress tree. The temperature here was much more pleasant and I followed the doors which seemed to open just before I got to them. I could do with this sort of system at home, especially in the kitchen.

After walking through several ante-chambers, a pair of huge ivory doors opened and I stepped carefully into a huge room which seemed lined with huge windows through which a golden white light shone and I felt a presence of someone or thing which was important–apart from me of course.

I voice seemed to come from nowhere, “We sent for you a week ago, why were you not here?”

I was spoken to so I replied. “I didn’t know, I apologise if it inconvenienced you.”

“Very well, you are forgiven this time.”

“Thank you.”

“You should have recovered from this illness days ago, and you would hav,e had you attended when you were supposed to.”

“I’m sorry.”

“So you should be. We have more important things to do than save the lives of sickly mortals.”

I said nothing.

“So, are you going to do as we wish?”

“Yes.”

“Good, you may leave us.”

“Thank you–oh, if I might ask a question?”

The impression I got was one of this thing tutting at me and I nearly laughed out loud except my chest hurt too much.

“You may but not about the gold hopper?”

“It isn’t.”

“Proceed.”

“Would you please help me to get better as quickly as possible?”

“Better at what?”

“Recover from this infection.”

“Very well–but you won’t enjoy it.”

“If it helps me, I’ll cope.”

“Very well.”

Suddenly my whole body felt on fire, and began to see flames erupting from my arms and legs. Normally I’d have screamed but I didn’t, I took my medicine as they say and when my chest produced plumes of smoke and flames and hurt like crazy, I nearly gave in and voiced my pain. I suppose I must have blacked out because I woke up back in the hospital.

“You had us worried for a bit Lady Cameron.” Dr Carlton was standing by the side of my bed. “Your temperature went up to a hundred and five, then dropped like someone had switched it off.”

The pain in chest had gone and apart from being wringing wet with sweat, I felt fine. “What happened to the space hopper?” I asked.

“Eh?”



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