Do Not Resuscitate. Charley Brindley

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Charley Brindley

      Do Not Resuscitate

Do Not Resuscitate byCharley Brindley[email protected]https://www.charleybrindley.com/Edited byKaren Bostonhttps://bit.ly/2rJDq3fCover byCharley Brindley

      © 2019 by Charley Brindley all rights reserved

      Printed in the United States of America

      First Edition November 2019

This book is dedicated toVern F. Brindley JrSome of Charley Brindley’s bookshave been translated into:ItalianSpanishPortugueseFrenchandRussianOther books by Charley Brindley

      1. Oxana’s Pit

      2. Raji Book One: Octavia Pompeii

      3. Raji Book Two: The Academy

      4. Raji Book Three: Dire Kawa

      5. Raji Book Four: The House of the West Wind

      6. Hannibal’s Elephant Girl Book One: Tin Tin Ban Sunia

      7. Hannibal’s Elephant Girl Book Two: Voyage to Iberia

      8. Cian

      9. Ariion XXIII

      10. The Last Seat on the Hindenburg

      11. Dragonfly vs Monarch: Book One

      12. Dragonfly vs Monarch: Book Two

      13. The Sea of Tranquility 2.0 Book One: Exploration

      14. The Sea of Tranquility 2.0 Book Two: Invasion

      15. The Sea of Tranquility 2.0 Book Three: The Sand

      Vipers

      16. The Sea of Tranquility 2.0 Book Four: The Republic

      17. Sea of Sorrows

      18. The Last Mission of the Seventh Cavalry

      19. Henry IX

      20. Qubit’s Incubator

      21. Casper’s Game

      22. The Rod of God

      Coming Soon

      23. Dragonfly vs Monarch: Book Three

      24. The Journey to Valdacia

      25. Still Waters Run Deep

      26. Ms Machiavelli

      27. Ariion XXIX

      28. The Last Mission of the Seventh Cavalry Book 2

      29. Hannibal’s Elephant Girl, Book Three

      See the end of the book for details about the other books

      Chapter One

      March 23, 2019

      I brushed my hand down my face, trying to wipe away the fog that shrouded my mind. As I did, my fingers caught on something stuck in my nose.

      What the hell? Where am I?

      The tube felt like it was halfway down my throat. I tried to pull it out, but it was taped to my face. My brain was stiff, drifting away. I tried to concentrate.

      Still nothing but muddled images. Not a thing I can lock onto. Eyes open, but hazy view of…what? Inside of a cloud. Lots of white stuff and shiny metal. Tubes. Beeping noise.

      Hospital. Oh, yeah. That doctor who looked like she was about twelve years old. Way too grim for a kid.

      I felt as if I’d been crushed and reconstituted into a piece of crap. Not much pain; just a mind full of wet cement.

      They’ve got me doped up on painkillers.

      Just as well.

      Hope they remember, ‘Do Not Resuscitate.’ I don’t want to hang onto a life of tubes, respirators, and beeping monitors.

      A soft, rustling sound.

      Man in blue, pretty powder blue. Another doctor? Good, not a teenager. Please don’t give me any bullshit about a few more years of so-called life. I’m almost eighty. A few more years of misery and hardships for Caitlion isn’t what I want. Just snip these tubes and let me go.

      The man in blue pulled a chair to the side of my bed, sat, and smiled.

      Not taking vitals, not looking sternly at monitors, no stethoscope draped around his neck, not shoving needles into me; just smiling. Big guy, maybe 6-3, lean, light beard, brown hair, blue eyes, dark blue, like that first shade of night.

      “What are you so…” Ugh, dry throat. I swallowed. “Chipper about?”

      “It’s almost time.”

      His voice was smooth, not as masculine as I expected. It was more like Mom’s voice, from when I was a kid. Soft, pleasant, making me feel like everything would be all right.

      Another sound. The door swishing open. I turned my head on the pillow to see the nurse.

      She checked the monitors. I wondered why the doctor had no interest in the readings.

      She tapped a red fingernail on a digital display, then smiled at me, ignoring the doctor.

      I tried to return her pleasantness. She was pretty and young, twenty-something. Her complexion was like the soft brown of summer wheat.

      “You doing okay, Mr. Brindley?”

      I nodded.

      “They’re going to bring you some nice mush and prune juice. Then the doctor will be in to talk to you.”

      When I tried to raise my right hand to point to the doctor sitting beside me, it was weighted down by a tube and two needles inserted into the back of my hand.

      She was gone before I could say anything.

      “You should probably ask to see your family,” the doctor said.

      “That bad, huh?”

      He nodded. “We have to get started.”

      “If I know my great-granddaughter, she’s around here somewhere.”

      “Sleeping in a chair, out in the waiting room.”

      “Can you get

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