Coffee House Writers

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login

logo

Coffee House Writers

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login
  • A Swan’s Vengeance

  • The Invitation: Part 6

  • Beneath the Snow

  • Teen Witch’s Survival Guide: Chapter 8

  • An Interview

  • Ignite

  • Silence

  • Lover of the Queen: Revelation

  • I Called Him Scraps.

  • The Cafe’s Rustic Bookcase

  • My Offering

  • Finding Comfort in Nostalgic Places

  • Snowed In Part 2

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 12

  • Ashley

  • New Beginnings

  • Zombie Killer Squad: Chapter Thirteen

  • A New Land

  • Are You There?

  • Teen Witch’s Survival Guide: Chapter 7

FictionRomanceSuspense & Thrillers
Home›Fiction›Waking Up: Missing Pieces – Part 5

Waking Up: Missing Pieces – Part 5

By Lo
June 1, 2020
1476
0
Share:
Dextrose Bag on IV Stand
Photo Courtesy of Marcelo Leal of Unsplash.com
0
(0)

Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3| Part 4

Content Warning: Recommended 18+ due to mature content, adult situations, and sensitive topics.

 


 

I lull in and out of consciousness in the wheelchair as I stare out the window. My mother’s voice awakens me each time I fall asleep – jolts of you used to do this, and you were this way. My body tenses into fits with each nightmare.

A tigress growls and rouses me. Her voice carries from the nurses’ station down the hall. “Diedre! Her name is Diedre Williams. Where’s my wife?”

The voice buzzes a memory somewhere in my brain; I taste fondant with ginger vanilla cake and raspberry filling. With my eyes closed, I smell an ocean breeze and cedar. My hands tingle with sensations of soft ringlets of long hair through them. My muscles release tension as a mysterious yet familiar warmth fills me.

“I’m so sorry, Ma’am, but there is no Diedre here. I’m afraid we need to ask you to leave.” The male nurse placates.

I roll closer to the cracked door, listening to the nurse’s firm, masculine rumble. With a shove, I wheel into the hall toward the day room. But I forget about the day room.

“Madison?” I whisper. Who is Madison? 

Growling at the nurses’ station is a phantom pulse electrifying my entire existence. The stacked bob of red hair and darting brown eyes on a tall thin frame fills my chest with the missing piece of that long-absent warmth and need. “Madison?” I speak louder in a voice I don’t recognize. She acknowledges me, and I exist. A flash of horror crosses her face. Security guards seize her as she runs toward me.

“What have you done to her? What have you done to my wife?” She fights against the security guards that restrain her as the large head nurse thunders down the hall to usher me back into my room.

Your wife?

“Michael, it’s time to go to take your nighttime medications and go to sleep.” The large head nurse blocks my view of the most beautiful human I’ve ever seen with her body. My eyes water as disconnected memories flood back, and I see flashes of my life before the accident.

In another time, another place: Madison reaches out to me with soft eyes and a weary, but unconditional smile. Diedre, it’s time to go to bed.

“Michael, it’s time to go to bed. We’re very sorry for the disturbance.” She grabs my wheelchair, whipping it around and holding my shoulder to prevent me from tipping out.

“That’s… not… my… name…” I shake my head and hyperventilate with clammy skin. My hand touches damp cheeks to clear blurred vision, and a pit opens inside of my chest. She shoves my chair into the room and slams the door as the chaos in the hallway continues.

Once the hallway quiets, a moment in silence passes before the male nurse opens the door with a gentle knocking. He brings in the candy-colored pastilles in their disposable paper cup with a Dixie cup and kicks the door closed with his foot. As he walks to the sink, he speaks without turning his head, “Some things aren’t adding up around here.” I extend my shaking left hand for the paper cup with the pills, then take the water with my right hand. “Before I ask any questions, let’s go through this one step at a time. First, the pills, then a big gulp of water, and swallow as if you’re drinking from the cup in therapy.”

I stare at the pills. “What are these?” My hoarse voice manages not to stutter.

The nurse sighs and nods, his eyes were scanning the room in thought. “You didn’t talk much when you first got here. Let me grab your chart.” The nurse opens the door and grabs the computer cart, keeping his eyes on my hand with the pills. “Your doctor prescribed them, you can talk to him about what they do tomorrow.” While he pulls up the chart, I follow the instructions. He takes my trash and looks at me, “you ready?”

“Yeah.” I nod, rotating the wheelchair to the assistive bars I use to help lift myself into bed as the nurse spots me. I hoist myself onto my feet, rotate onto the hospital bed, and settle.

He returns his attention to the computer cart. The nurse reads off, “400 milligrams magnesium, 5 milligrams melatonin to help with circadian rhythm disorder – common after TBIs – and 200 milligrams topiramate to prevent seizures and 5 milligrams olanzapine. That last one is pretty common to prescribe to patients after brain injuries. It’s calming, rebuilds sleep architecture, and stabilizes moods. Have you been on that one before?”

“I don’t remember. I don’t think so.” I mutter.

The nurse shakes his head. “Your chart doesn’t show a history of mental illness, but…” His eyes do a full-body scan. My limbs take on minds of their own – wrap themselves around me as shields. He looks back at the screen as his face turns red. He pushes the computer cart out of the room and closes the door, sitting next to my bed in my mother’s chair. “Listen, Michael, I gotta know. What’s with the breasts?”

My arm shifts and left-hand splays its fingers, patting my chest. Within a few moments, I laugh as tears roll down my face. The fatty tissue over my pectorals muscles aches as I gain awareness. “I do have breasts, don’t I?”

One of his eyebrows knots in toward a deep crease in the center of his forehead. “Do you remember why?”

As he asks, I train my eyes on his badge and make out the letters E-D-D-I-E. I raise my head as the room begins to take on rainbows in my periphery. The medication seeps into my veins, but something stirs. “Ed-die,” I stutter, “I’m… n-not Michael.” The medication smiles for me.

Eddie’s face drains of color, his mouth slack and eyes widening. “Wait… then who are you? What about your mother? Your childhood photos?”

I shake my head, exhaustion curling and extending its way into my muscles like a wiggling worm, my eyes falling closed. “She’s my m-mom. . .” I grasp the blanket with my left hand, pulling it over me. The nurse does his walk around the bed; checks the floor pads and bed rails for nightfall precautions. As Eddie approaches the head of the bed, I meet his eyes. The eye contact hurts my head and chest; I maintain eye contact through the pain as my eyelids threaten to collapse. I curl my left hand into a ball and hold it against my chest, then reach my right hand up to my head. I comb my fingers through my mop of hair and trace the surgical scars on my scalp as my eyelids fail to support the weight of sleep.

“I’m Dee.” I introduce, relaxed, and comfortable as Eddie readjusts the blankets over me and dims the lights.

“It’s nice to meet you, Dee. I’ll update your chart. Sleep well.” Eddie shut off the last non-red light switch as I drift into a restless solipsistic sleep.

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 0 / 5. Vote count: 0

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

As you enjoyed this post...

Follow us on social media!

Oh no!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

Tagstransgender rightsserial fictionmedical horrorNeurorehabilitationtransgender characterlgbtq+Sci-Fi Romance
Previous Article

Beauty in Your Words

Next Article

My Fairytale Dream (A Poem)

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0

Lo

Lo grew up on the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia. They received their BSc from Mary Baldwin Women’s College in Staunton, Virginia and their MS from Chatham University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Related articles More from author

  • A bright light comes through the leaves in the woods.
    FictionRomanceFantasy

    Lover of the Queen: Procession

    November 24, 2025
    By Amana Zanella
  • Flamingo in the water
    FictionMysteryWomen's Fiction

    The Island Flamingo: Chapter 45

    July 7, 2025
    By Adriana Philips
  • Dextrose Bag on IV Stand
    HorrorFiction

    Waking Up: Mother – Part 4

    May 18, 2020
    By Lo
  • Flamingo in the water
    FictionRomanceMystery

    The Island Flamingo: Chapter 43

    January 20, 2025
    By Adriana Philips
  • Dark red and orange sunset sky with dramatic, swirling clouds. In the center, a decorative red-orange label with the title 'The Prince’s Secret' in white serif font.
    RomanceFantasyFiction

    Truth in the Cottage

    August 4, 2025
    By Lynifer Craft
  • white sandy beach with clear blue water and footprints
    MysterySuspense & ThrillersFiction

    The Invitation: Part 6

    February 2, 2026
    By LC Ahl (Lucy)

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may be interested

  • A man's hand covered in dirt
    LifestyleCulturePoetry

    The New Year’s Air

  • PoetryRomanceFantasy

    My Fairytale Dreams (A Poem)

  • White flowers among a bed of grass
    FictionFantasy

    The Red Maiden, Part Twenty-Two

Timeline

  • February 2, 2026

    A Swan’s Vengeance

  • February 2, 2026

    The Invitation: Part 6

  • February 2, 2026

    Beneath the Snow

  • February 2, 2026

    Teen Witch’s Survival Guide: Chapter 8

  • February 2, 2026

    An Interview

Latest Comments

  • Susi
    on
    November 3, 2025
    Beautiful, Ivor!

    Paddling In Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 30, 2025
    Thank you for your gracious words, Violet 😍📖🌏

    It Is Manuscript Time

  • violet
    on
    October 27, 2025
    So aptly 'you' Ivor! I love it!

    It Is Manuscript Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 24, 2025
    Many thanks for visiting my poem here at Coffee House Writers Magazine, and thank you for ...

    Paddling In Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 24, 2025
    Many thanks for visiting my poem here at Coffee House Writers Magazine, and thank you for ...

    Paddling In Time

About us

  • coffeehousewriters3@gmail.com

Donate to Coffee House Writers

Coindrop.to me

Follow us

© Copyright 2018-2025 Coffee House Writers. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s administrator and owner is strictly prohibited. Privacy Policy · Disclaimer