‘I know what you’re doing, but I don’t know how you’re doing it.’ Dr. Lennox interlocked his fingers tightly together and stared across the desk.
Vivian volleyed the stare back across, her face set to neutral. ‘I don’t know what you mean.’
Dr. Lennox sighed. ‘How long have you worked for me Vivian?’
‘Just over five years.’
He unclasped his fingers and rested his hands on the desk. ‘Do you know what I did on the weekend?’
Vivian frowned. ‘Um, no.’
‘You’d never guess.’
Vivian studied Dr. Lennox’s blank face. ‘Then I won’t try.’
‘I went through patient medical files. All weekend.’ He stood up and retrieved a brown battered briefcase from beside the filling cabinet. ‘I’ve spent all weekend correlating data.’ Sitting back down he pulled out some papers from the bag and set them down on the desk, placing the bag on the floor. He indicated to one of the sheets with his right hand. ‘This is a list of all my patients who, having been diagnosed with terminal diseases, miraculously got better. Without medical help.’ He looked up from the sheet of paper to Vivian.
She remained perfectly still, hands resting lightly on her lap. The only movement was a pronounced swallow.
‘And this list,’ said Dr. Lennox. He pointed to the other sheet of paper. ‘This is a list of people who have suddenly developed the same terminal illnesses, seemingly overnight.’ He looked up from the desk again. ‘If you want to say anything, please, just jump on in.’
Vivian shrugged, staring at the papers on the desk. ‘People get sick all the time, and some people get better, that’s life.’
Dr. Lennox laughed. ‘Well, yeah, that is life, yet, do you know what the strange thing here is?’ His face crumbled the smile away and his eyes narrowed.
Vivian’s only response was to breathe a little faster.
Dr. Lennox continued. ‘These people on this sudden illness list, well, they got sick on the same day that the people on the sick list got better.’
Vivian tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear. ‘Co-incidence.’
Dr. Lennox smiled broadly, yet the smile didn’t reach his eyes. ‘We both know it’s no co-incidence.’ He looked down at the lists in front of him. ‘Mrs. Ramirez had terminal bowel cancer, in June she no longer has it, but Mrs. Godfrey, of previous good health, now has terminal bowel cancer.’
‘That doesn’t mean anything,’ said Vivian. She crossed her legs slowly and leaned back into the groaning plastic chair.
Dr. Lennox rubbed at his moustache. ‘Not on its own no. But there are seven other cases I’ve found. Seven other terminally ill patients, spanning back five years, that have miraculously been cured without medical intervention. And seven matching patients that have developed those exact terminal illnesses overnight. Shall I read you the other six out?’
‘I don’t think there’s a need for that.’ Vivian folded her arms.
‘I checked on the system, and the dates that they appeared to switch their illnesses, both patients were in the surgery, and on all seven days, and for each of those patients, you took their blood.’ Dr. Lennox mirrored Vivian by leaning back in his chair and folding his arms. He had a smug grin on his face, as if he was Poirot revealing the murderer at the end of an Agatha Christie adaptation.
Vivian returned his smile slyly. ‘I’m your only phlebotomist and I’m in most days, so that’s not surprising.’
Dr. Lennox rocked on his chair slightly, loosening his arms to rest on his stomach. ‘So, you’re not going to tell me?’
Vivian tilted her head. ‘Tell you what?’
‘How you’re doing it?’
‘Doing what?’ Vivian uncrossed her arms and leant forward. ‘I’m not sure what you’re accusing me of, do I need my union rep in here with me?’
‘Vivian, of course you don’t need a rep.’ Dr. Lennox attempted a warm smile as he rested forward onto the desk. ‘This is just a friendly chat, completely off the record. Just between you and me.’ He picked up his silver pen and started to roll it between his fingers.
Vivian gazed out of the window, she watched flowers being blown from the apple blossom tree outside. ‘I don’t know what you want me to say.’
‘I merely want you to tell me the truth. I’m a doctor, I just want to know how you are curing these people.’ He tapped his pen gently on the desk protector. ‘And I know it is you because all the saved patients are patients you like, and all the inflicted patients are patients you don’t.’
Vivian’s eyebrows flickered up.
Dr. Lennox smiled and put his pen down. ‘I hear the gossip when I’m getting coffee.’ His smile morphed into a frown. ‘But I can’t logically work it out.’
Vivian’s shoulders dropped and she stared at her hands. ‘It’s not logical.’ She looked up at the doctor. ‘Or ethical.’
Dr. Lennox nodded slightly. ‘Go on.’
‘You won’t believe me, and if you report me, no one would believe you either.’
Dr. Lennox nodded again. ‘Try me then, you have nothing to lose. Because if you don’t tell me, I’m going to have to let you go.’
Vivian’s nostrils flared. ‘I have a contract.’
‘I have a Hippocratic oath.’
Vivian bit the inside of her lip and stared at the blossom tree outside the window again. ‘I can’t explain scientifically how I can do these things. I’ve researched, but it’s a phenomenon, and I’ve been afflicted with it since I was a child.’
‘Afflicted?’
Vivian focused her attention back to Dr. Lennox. ‘Yes. My Gran called it a gift. I call it a curse. It’s a power I have, but it makes me a bad person.’
Dr. Lennox frowned. ‘You have the power of life and death?’
Vivian twiddled with the jade crystal on her necklace. ‘You could say everyone has the power of life or death. You choose not to kill people so you could say you are giving them the power of life.’
‘I could quite easily murder my ex.’ A nervous laugh followed from the doctor.
Vivian shuffled the chair forward and tilted herself towards him. ‘What stops you?’
‘What?’
‘What stops you killing her?’
Dr. Lennox sat upright and smoothed his moustache down with his index finger. ‘Because I don’t want to go to prison, and it’s wrong.’
Vivian remained angled forwards. ‘So, you choose to give her life because of the consequences?’
Dr. Lennox picked up his pen again and flicked it on and off with his thumb. ‘Where’s this going?’
Vivian smiled. ‘Imagine if there were no consequences? If you could kill without repercussions, your choices might be different.’
‘Yes, but -‘
‘I’ve gone a little off tangent.’ Vivian repositioned herself back into the creaking chair. ‘Basically, I can take away illness but then it gets passed on.’
Dr. Lennox rubbed his forehead with his pen free hand. ‘Why? Why does it get passed on?’
Vivian shrugged her left shoulder. ‘I don’t know. When I first realized what I could do, cure people, I thought it was amazing, indeed a gift. But I found that whoever I touched after ‘curing’ someone else came down with what I had removed.’
Dr. Lennox stared at Vivian, his eyes flickering all around her face. ‘I have so many questions. When you say touch, would brushing past someone cause you to take or give illnesses?’
Vivian shook her head. ‘No, I’ve honed my ‘technique’ over the years. I now squeeze and concentrate my mind to make it happen. Kind of like channeling it.’
Dr. Lennox nodded. ‘When you transferred illnesses in here, was that random or planned?’
‘Planned. Sort of.’ Vivian smiled.
‘Sort of?’
‘I always knew which patients I wanted to cure, that was the planned part. Giving their illnesses to others was a byproduct.’
Dr. Lennox placed the pen down on the desk protector. ‘Chosen at random?’
‘Well, not completely random, I didn’t draw names out of a hat.’ Vivian laughed and fiddled with her hair, repositioning a hair grip. ‘I’d see who else was coming in that same day for bloods, and choose off the list who was the least deserving.’
Dr. Lennox sunk his head into his hands. ‘Playing God.’
‘I don’t believe in God, I was merely making choices.’ Vivian frowned.’ Wouldn’t you?’
Dr. Lennox lifted his head slowly. ‘No, I couldn’t pick someone to die. That’s against my oath. And my humanity.’
‘You think it’s fair that Annie Kenwood dies from cancer, leaving her husband to look after her two children, while Grant Bailey abuses his body with illegal drugs and lives a long and happy life?’
‘No, but that’s life, that’s not for us to judge that’s for -‘
‘God to decide, but there is no God so why shouldn’t it be up to you, or I, or anyone else decent to judge?’ Vivian pursed her lips together and curled her hands into gripped fists.
‘But you’ve given a death sentence to seven people.’ Dr. Lennox grimaced. ‘You’ve killed seven people.’
‘I’ve saved seven people. Seven more deserving people.’ Vivian smiled. ‘It cancels out.’
The doctor rubbed his head. ‘Why can’t you just take away the illness? Why do you have to give it to someone else?’
Vivian gesticulates with her hands, as if swatting a fly away. ‘I don’t know. It just happens. That’s my curse. If I take away illness and don’t deliberately pass it on quickly, say within a day, the illness transfers with less effort to anyone. If I didn’t choose someone and pass it on, it would pass on by a random handshake, or hug with a loved one, or squeezing a friend’s hand. So I have to pass it on.’
‘Why don’t you just stop doing it? Don’t take illnesses and don’t pass them on, just let nature take its course.’
‘Because having the power is addictive. It’s wrong and it’s consuming but it’s also an immense rush.’ Vivian’s eyes sparkle. ‘And it’s not all life and death, I have a little fun with it too.’
‘Fun?’
‘I don’t just have the power to cure terminal doom and gloom stuff, I can cure hay fever, migraines, conjunctivitis, colds and such like.’
‘And you give those to others?’
‘Yes, I give those to people who have only slightly annoyed me.’ Vivian laughed.
Dr. Lennox lowered his head in hands once more. ‘Oh Vivian, I wish I hadn’t asked you now.’
Vivian’s smile ebbed away. ‘Why?’
He rubbed his face as he lifted it up to look her in the eye. ‘Because I can’t have you working here anymore. I have to protect my patients.’
‘But I’m saving the nice ones, you’re only going to be protecting horrid people, that doesn’t make sense.’ Vivian’s eyes widened and her voice softened. ‘Think of all the good souls I can save here.’
Dr. Lennox’s face toughened up. ‘How can you save souls when you don’t believe in God?’
Vivian sighed. ‘So, you don’t want to work with me? Help me choose?’
‘No. It’s wrong, you have to go.’ He placed his hands down onto the desk. ‘And I can’t give you a reference.’
Vivian swallowed hard and reached across, squeezing his hands tightly. ‘But I’ve been so loyal to you.’ She stared deeply into his eyes, still squeezing his hands.
Dr. Lennox pulled his hands away and stood up from the desk. ‘What did you do?’
Vivian relaxed back into the chair and smiled a satisfying smile.
Dr. Lennox’s eyes flickered between his hands and Vivian. ‘Have you given me cancer?’
Vivian laughed. ‘No, that’s not going to keep me my job here is it? I don’t want revenge, I just want to keep my job so I can keep on doing my good work.’
Dr. Lennox clutched at his chest, pain escaping from his face.
‘On my way to work this morning a man had a cardiac arrest in the coffee shop.’
The doctor fell back into his chair, he tried to grab at the phone but just knocked it onto the floor.
‘I saved his life, the man in the coffee shop, he always let me go in front of him in the queue. I took away his heart attack.’
Dr. Lennox, pale and clammy, tried to speak but words were trapped and movement slowed.
‘I’ve been careful who I’ve touched today, I was saving it for pervy Duncan this afternoon. He’ll have to wait now.’ She picked up the lists from the desk and fed them into the shredder, then placed the phone back on the desk. Staring at the lifeless body opposite her she sighed. ‘Oh Paul, we could have worked so well together.’
Vivian picked up phone and dialed 999. ‘Ambulance. I’m at Mainwaring Surgery, one of our doctors has had a heart attack, please hurry.’ While holding onto the phone in one hand she opened the door with the other and shouted down the corridor.
‘I need some help here!’