Free Read Novels Online Home

Falling by Simona Ahrnstedt (34)

Hugo was outside, waiting for her the next morning. He flicked his cigarette butt across the street, and Isobel watched it bounce on the red sand. The village was made up of simple two-story buildings constructed of concrete, and a lot of smaller mud houses. Thin-looking animals and hardworking people lived peacefully alongside one of the world’s largest populations of insects. In the capital, N’Djamena, where practically all foreigners lived, there was a university, luxury hotels, and a business center, but here in Massakory it was like traveling hundreds of years back in time. There were barely any shops to speak of and practically no running water. Local health care consisted of a medicine man who treated his patients with—ineffective at best, and deadly at worst—household remedies.

Bonjour, Docteur,” Hugo said, opening the door for her.

She climbed into the car, and Hugo steered the rattling jeep out of Massakory. They were in luck today, too. The road hadn’t been washed away by rain, and they didn’t pass a single roadblock.

Isobel peered out of the wound-down windows. The car lurched, and she steadied herself with a hand on the roof.

“One of the oxygen machines just died,” Idris greeted her when she arrived at the hospital.

Merde.

It had only been a matter of time, but they needed those oxygen machines.

“I’ll prioritize it when I talk to Leila,” she promised, but wondered whether it would make much difference. How much did an oxygen machine cost? And if Medpax could somehow afford it, how would they even get it down here?

“Rounds?” she asked.

Idris picked up his notepad, and together they got ready to do their morning rounds.

Docteur!

Isobel turned toward the voice, her face breaking into a smile as she crouched down. She held out her arms. “Marius!”

She had looked for him every day, asked the staff and Idris about him. Finally. She embraced him, held him tight, noticing how thin he felt, his slight boy’s body, all bones and no subcutaneous fat. She blinked away the tears that burned at her eyes, allowed herself to be filled with relief and thanks.

I was afraid you had died.

She hugged the boy longer than she should, tried to transfer some of her energy.

She held him at arm’s length, her eyes moving over him, and noted the healthy whites of his eyes and his clear skin. He was undernourished and had that same haunted expression she’d almost only ever seen on orphaned and homeless children, but otherwise he looked healthy.

“Are you well?” she asked, knowing that Idris was impatient to get started. There were over one hundred patients admitted, and he needed her. To an outsider, it might seem heartless to have no time for a hug, but she knew better. Idris always weighed things up, and one hundred sick kids were simply weightier than one lonely boy.

Marius held up a hand and showed her a tiny scrape.

She looked at it. “Can you wait for me? Stay here and I’ll put a Band-Aid on that. Plus, I have a gift for you.” It was against all rules, of course, against all principles. Growing close to the local population, giving gifts. Everyone knew it led to complications. “Wait for me,” she said, and stroked his cheek, knowing that she was the only one Marius had. She got up and hurried away after Idris.

Their rounds took several hours, and it was only long after lunch that Isobel had time to sneak back to the office again. Marius was underneath a table, playing with some stones. He stood when she came in and flashed her a cautious look, as though he needed to make sure she wasn’t a threat, before his shoulders relaxed and he gave her a lopsided smile. She gave him yet another hug.

“Did you eat?” she asked, studying his too-short trousers and threadbare tank. Marius nodded, but she knew he probably did it only to reassure her. His trust in other people was virtually nonexistent. That was just how things were when you lived without any kind of security whatsoever. She had met many street kids in her time, seen small children starve to death, four- and five-year-olds forced to make it on their own in the world, seen undernourished nine- and ten-year-olds sell their feeble bodies for food and drugs. It was a reality that, as a field-worker, you just had to accept if you wanted to make it through your work. But to her, Marius was different. She didn’t know why she was so attached to him. It was just something that happened with some people.

She took out the plastic bag she kept in a locked cupboard in the office. Each morning she had brought it with her, and every night it had followed her back to the compound; she’d guarded the bag as though it were full of gold. She handed Marius the cheese puffs. It was such an impractical gift—they took up room in her luggage and weren’t nutritious at all—but Marius’s happiness was worth it. She gave him a small chocolate bar, too. At least that contained some fat and a few minerals, she thought, hoping he would manage to keep hold of it. She had brought ten, and planned to hand them out over the course of her stay.

“Where do you live now?” she asked as she quickly cleaned his scrape and put a Band-Aid on it.

He just shrugged in reply. He started to eat the cheese puffs one by one, chewing slowly with his eyes blissfully closed. I have to go back to the ward soon, she thought, as she swallowed the lump in her throat. How could life be so unfair? She really didn’t understand.

“Marius?”

Oui?” He looked at her with those intelligent eyes of his, always like a knife straight through the heart. He was so kind and considerate, one of those boys who would rather play and daydream than kick and fight. A child who, if there was any justice in the world, should have the chance to develop and go as far as he wanted. Instead, he lived on the street, and she could see the fear and forlornness deep in his eyes, and it broke her heart every time.

“I’ll be here at the hospital for a while—don’t go disappearing, okay?”

Oui,” he repeated, and she hoped he would come back to the hospital, that she would be able to feed and keep an eye on him for the few weeks she was here.

A stressed voice called out for her. “Docteur?

She knew she needed to rush off, that this was a luxury she couldn’t afford. The last thing she heard was the rustle of the bag of cheese puffs and Marius’s quiet munching.

After a long afternoon in the hospital, a shaky car journey back to the village lay ahead of her, followed by the usual stew.

Isobel washed quickly. The inhabitants of Massakory were almost exclusively Muslim, and they were so clean that she always felt a little like a filthy Westerner, so she made sure to scrub her hands, feet, and face as often as she could. She took out a clean T-shirt, ran a brush through her hair, and brushed her teeth before sitting down at the laptop again.

Her bedroom was little more than a hard bed, a footstool, and a mosquito net, so she preferred to sit in the lounge. The cook was outside the house, smoking. Smoke flowed in through the mosquito net. She could hear voices outside, the occasional shout, but otherwise silence.

When Alexander called, she answered immediately.

“Hi,” she said.

He looked shamelessly fresh, as though he’d just showered. She could see expensive furniture and huge windows behind him, bright and clean and Western.

“How are you?” he asked. She was drawn into his smile.

“Good,” she replied honestly. It had been an intense day, both physically and emotionally, but they always were.

“No one died today either. It’s a huge relief.”

She had been there almost a week now. In three more, she would be replaced by a Belgian field doctor. If all her days were like this, it would be one of the best trips she’d ever made.

“But we lost one of our oxygen machines,” she added.

“Are they important?”

“Yeah, they’re absolutely vital. You can treat so many problems with oxygen; the equipment is easy to use, doesn’t require any training. They’re our best friends. Children will die if we can’t replace it.”

“Jesus.”

“I know. It’s frustrating.”

“Is there anything I can do?”

“You don’t have a spare oxygen machine lying around?”

“I’ll check, but I don’t think so.”

She laughed, leaned in toward the screen, and rested her chin in her hand. She could see shining stainless steel worktops and a bowl of brilliant green apples. He was in the kitchen.

“Tell me what you ate today.”

“You want to talk about food?” he asked, sounding incredulous.

She nodded. “I can honestly say that about ninety percent of my free time here is spent fantasizing about food.”

“Pancakes with strawberries and maple syrup.”

“American pancakes? God, that sounds good. More.”

“I had pizza yesterday. A slice from my favorite place, a little hole in the wall. I sat in the park with my friend Romeo and ate it. Big, long strings of mozzarella.”

Isobel groaned. “Know what I miss most?”

“I’d like it to be me, but I guess it’s something edible. Tell me.”

“Coffee. Hot, black, freshly brewed coffee. With white bread. There’s no bread down here.”

Alexander laughed. His eyes glittered, and she knew he was thinking about the time he’d made food for her. When they’d laughed in his kitchen in Stockholm. When they’d made love.

“What did you do yesterday?” she asked, and studied his face. “Did you go out?” She had no right to ask, but she did it anyway.

He shook his head. “No. I’ve got a lot of work to catch up on. I’ve actually decided to take a break from the partying.”

“You have? Why?”

She twisted a lock of hair around her finger, told herself that the tingling feeling that pulsed through her body was tiredness, stress, or something like that, not a glimmer of hope, a feeling that things hadn’t ended but started over. He had sounded honest yesterday, and she had decided to believe he was telling the truth, that he hadn’t slept with the bimbo.

“Because I think it’s time.”

Alexander watched Isobel smile and knew that he’d passed a fork in the road when he’d decided to dramatically reduce his drinking. The thought had come to him as he jogged in Central Park that morning. Just like that. And he had made up his mind. For his own good. He had been living in some kind of limbo since last summer. He hadn’t thought about it before, but once he did, it was clear.

Last summer when he learned Natalia wasn’t his father’s child, he had gotten definitive evidence that his mother had been unfaithful. Long before, he had suspected. That was why he’d hated infidelity his whole life. It was one thing to sleep with married women, but something completely different to be the one who was unfaithful, and he had never cheated on anyone. Still, he was petrified of being like Ebba, with her constant need for affirmation; terrified of having inherited the worst traits of his beautiful, superficial mother. After it came out that Nat was the result of her infidelity, the dramatic revelations had kept on coming, and he had started to lose the footing he thought he had created for himself.

That was the superficial reason he would be ready to give to the few people he cared about. Natalia. Romeo. Maybe Åsa. Maybe Isobel, if she ever wondered why he’d acted the way he had, with women and alcohol. But then there was the other thing. His childhood. He had never really believed in being able to repress things. But he had done and experienced things he had buried so deeply, he’d thought they were gone. Now something had happened. The fact was, he was an adult. He could choose to move on. He wanted to, for his own good, and when he saw Isobel’s cautious smile at his words, saw that he hadn’t lost her trust, it felt even more worthwhile. It felt fantastic.

“I have to go,” she said from her side of the screen.

The picture had started to lag again.

“I’ll call tomorrow,” he said, and knew that he’d already started counting down the hours until they would talk again.

Once he hung up, he picked up an apple and grabbed his sunglasses from the kitchen counter. He shoved his credit card into a pocket, took the elevator down, said hello to the doorman, and pulled out his cell. He called Romeo.

“What are you doing?”

“Fighting with one of my chefs. Fucking divas.”

You’re a diva. Want to go shopping?”

“What’re you buying?”

Alexander thought about the gifts he’d bought for women over the years. Flowers, of course. Necklaces and jewels. Clothes, holidays. He had probably used his credit card for almost anything there was. But there was one thing he had never bought for a woman before.

“I’m going to buy an oxygen machine.”

“It’s Sunday. Aren’t the oxygen machine shops closed?”

“That’s why I have the big credit card with me. You coming?”

“You sound different.”

“Yeah. Well, I am different.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Leslie North, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, Jordan Silver, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Bella Forrest, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Mia Ford, Kathi S. Barton, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Penny Wylder,

Random Novels

Rampage (Bound by Cage Book 2) by Brittany Crowley

Blessed Betrayal by Livia Grant

Brotherhood Protectors: Catching Lana (Kindle Worlds Novella) by Kat Mizera

Rebel by R.R. Banks

The Importance of Being Scandalous by Kimberly Bell

Viktor (Happy Evil After Book 1) by Sarah Marsh

Her Pretty Bones: A completely addictive crime thriller with nail-biting suspense by Carla Kovach

Finally, Our Forever (Panthera Security Book 1) by Elisa Leigh

Unchained Beauty (Deadly Beauties Live On Book 5) by C.M. Owens

Consequences by Kasey Millstead

A Court of Ice and Wind (War of the Gods Book 3) by Meg Xuemei X

Moth to a Flame by K Webster

The Naked Alpha: A Sexy Werewolf Romance by Ellie Valentina, Simply Shifters

Pyxis: Book Three of The Stardust Series by Reed, Autumn, Clarke, Julia

Can't Buy Me Love by Abigail Drake, Tammy Mannersly, Bridie Hall, Grea Warner, Lisa Hahn, Melissa Kay Clarke, Stephanie Keyes

Two Guys: The Game Series by LP Lovell, Stevie J. Cole

Charmed Wolf (Wolves of Whiskey Hollow Book 1) by Lia Davis

Lord of Temptation by Lorraine Heath

No Reservations: A Fusion Novella by Kristen Proby

The Adviser by Sydney Presley