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MArc: A Visible Impression

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On the way to the hospital, Henry had to stop for gas; he was headed inside the gas station to pay the clerk for the ten dollars’ worth of gas. Upon opening the convenience store’s door, a homeless man offered to suck Henry’s dick for five dollars. Henry snatched up the old man, ready to beat his ass, and then Cathy hollered out the window, tell that nigga to get a job, and bring your ass on, so we can get my fat ass to the hospital. Only if she had known what was being asked of her husband, she too would have probably wanted to beat his ass.
Henry and Cathy arrived at the Hospital; Cathy plopped down in a wheelchair. Henry wheeled Cathy past the emergency room and into an elevator; they got off on the 4th floor, the maternity ward. Henry pushed Cathy up to the nurses’ station. The reception nurse took Cathy into a triage room, where she was given a gown to change into. Then, another nurse in green scrubs appeared and introduced herself as Natalie.
Natalie will be Cathy’s labor and delivery nurse. Natalie noticed that patches of skin on Cathy’s face had started to lose color, and just then, Cathy asked for help because her vision was beginning to fade. A team of nurses rendered aid to stabilize Cathy’s breathing and then notified the on-call OB-GYN doctor, and within moments, Dr. Foote appeared and took over the show.
Cathy’s labor was pretty much touch and go, and then unexpectedly, the baby’s heart rate dropped from the 130s down to the low 60s. The nurses immediately rolled Cathy onto her left side, and when that didn’t work, the nurses rolled Cathy from side to side and increased her oxygen setting because her breathing had become shallow.
The baby was high in the uterus; he would come down into the birthing canal but would go back up, making the delivery difficult. The baby had finally come down but ended up lying across Cathy’s vagina, not allowing the doctors to deliver him/her the conventional way. All the while, the baby’s oxygen levels were steadily slowing down, and there was a fear that the placenta may detach from the uterine wall, which would cut off the baby’s oxygen supply. If that happened, Cathy’s baby would be in danger of dying.

165 pages, Kindle Edition

Published June 30, 2024

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Marc Johnson

51 books3 followers
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