Czerny continued to position Amanda’s wrist in the scanner. “David. Hard to believe he’s just sixteen. I know it’s premature to say, but I suspect he’s a genius.”
The medical lab was once a hotel meeting room. Only the conference tables had been removed, replaced by expensive-looking machines that were utter mysteries to Amanda. The device Czerny currently used on her arm had six Frisbee-size metal rings, all connected by gooseneck rods to a contraption that resembled a photocopier. Czerny had called it a free-induction tomograph. She assumed the imaging was electromagnetic, like MRI scans.
As the machine hummed in busy analysis, Amanda writhed uncomfortably at the odd sensation in her healthy arm. It tingled nonstop with invisible flurry, as if a thousand ants crawled all over it.
“From what he told me, he had a very unique upbringing,” Czerny said. “His father was a world-renowned theoretical physicist, much like our own Dr. Quint. The two of them traveled the world. David’s lived in Mexico, England, Japan, Holland. Never in one place more than a year.”
“Did he mention anything about his mother?”
“No. I was curious but I didn’t ask. He looked pained enough talking about his father.”
Amanda vented an airy sigh. “He seems to be handling this so much better than me.”
“We all react differently to trauma. In your defense, he’s not saddled with a broken wrist.” He studied the new image on the monitor. “A distal radius fracture, from the looks of it.”
Amanda squinted at the scan, unable to make heads or tails of it until she followed Czerny’s finger.
“Oh there it is. Good. No compounding. Doesn’t look like joint damage. I don’t even think this’ll need realignment. Do you?”
Czerny stared at her in muted wonder.
“I’m a nurse,” she told him.
“I was about to guess you were a doctor. In any case, you’re right. This was a nice clean break.”
“Good. Thank God.”
“Now, let’s see what we can do about making you a better splint.”
Amanda watched Czerny carefully as he rooted through the supply drawers. “You seem to know a lot about treating people.”
“I was a field medic in the British army. I’ve seen my fair share of broken limbs.”
“What part of England are you from?”
His genial smile turned sour. “The part they call Poland.”
“Oh. Sorry. I assumed from your accent—”
“Common mistake. Like most of my people, I was taught the King’s English and sent to fight in his wars. Anyway, Pole, Jackie—it hardly matters now. I’m a naturalized citizen of these great United States. God bless the peaceful eagle.”
Amanda’s stomach lurched. The invisible bugs on her arm scurried faster. “You, uh . . . you wouldn’t happen to have a cigarette, would you?”
Czerny paused his work, momentarily thrown. “I’m afraid not. If you’re looking for a chemical relaxant, we have a few on hand that are far less toxic than nicotine.” He eyed her cautiously. “And far more legal.”
She blinked at him stupidly. “You’re telling me cigarettes are illegal?”
Czerny fought another wild grin. Marvelous. Absolutely marvelous.
“They’ve been contraband for thirty years now. Not that they can’t be found. If you’re truly in need, I can ask my colleagues. One of them might have a pack of Chinese nicquans hidden away.”
Amanda covered her mouth, stifling a black and hopeless chuckle. Czerny gently squeezed her shoulder and reached into his pocket.
“Ms. Given—Amanda—I can only imagine what a trying experience this is for you. But you will adapt. I promise. Until then, here.”
He pressed a warm coin into her hand. Though it was the size of a dime and decagon-shaped, it was clearly a copper-colored one-cent piece. It still said “In God We Trust.” And it still had a side-profile engraving of Abraham Lincoln.
“One of ours,” Czerny told her. “From the pennies we found in David’s pocket, it seems your currency is different, but still a little the same. Next time you’re overwhelmed, just remind yourself that this isn’t completely foreign. This isn’t square one. Things are different, but they’re still a little the same.”
His words, though well intentioned, were worth less than the money he gave her. Amanda looked at the surgical table in the center of the room and thought about her new predicament. She was an otherworldly being in a building full of scientists. It seemed all but inevitable that, dead or alive, she’d end up on that table. And while Dr. Czerny cut Amanda open, the mousy little blonde would scribble on her clipboard, taking copious notes on how the subject’s vital organs were different, but still a little the same.
—
By the time Mia returned to the game parlor, David had switched his interests from astronomy to engineering. A pair of shaky domino towers rose two feet from the surface of the pool table. They’d each been built at subtle angles, meticulously designed to lean toward each other until they ultimately connected. He took a quick moment to process Mia.
“You cleaned up nicely.”