[Voyage Link: Here.]
"And the multiple compound fractures in your right hand are because….you say you stopped a bullet with your bare hand?" the Doctor asked in a monotone voice as he frowned suspiciously at his patient, leafing through the notes on his clipboard, a mix of annoyance and disbelief plastered on his face as if to make sure he had not misread anything.
"Yes...It was a pistol; the same size and length as a standard issue...probably same caliber and strength…I put my hand over its muzzle and-" Renero began, the end of his words laboured, yet, he was cut short once again by the doctor's court flick of the hand, a mix of disdain and disbelief painted clearly on his face. Renero let out a heavy sigh.
Clad in striped pajamas, bandages wrapped all around his body, though most notably onto his left arm with faint crimson showing through, Renero was sitting against was must have been half a dozen pillows over two beds, his white coat draped over the headboard.
On his lap sat the book he had been reading a few moments before, a blue hardback with the title of “Classification of Beasts: The Blues, The Grand Line and Beyond.” It was a widely interesting book, vivid in its descriptions, so much so that the reader could easily imagine the beings it detailed, even if they never seen anything like it. Yet, the pain that snaked all across Renero’s body made focusing on the book near impossible, able to only read a paragraph or so, before having to stop, the pain pulling him out of his mental safari.
"And the multiple compound fractures in your right hand are because….you say you stopped a bullet with your bare hand?" the Doctor asked in a monotone voice as he frowned suspiciously at his patient, leafing through the notes on his clipboard, a mix of annoyance and disbelief plastered on his face as if to make sure he had not misread anything.
"Yes...It was a pistol; the same size and length as a standard issue...probably same caliber and strength…I put my hand over its muzzle and-" Renero began, the end of his words laboured, yet, he was cut short once again by the doctor's court flick of the hand, a mix of disdain and disbelief painted clearly on his face. Renero let out a heavy sigh.
Clad in striped pajamas, bandages wrapped all around his body, though most notably onto his left arm with faint crimson showing through, Renero was sitting against was must have been half a dozen pillows over two beds, his white coat draped over the headboard.
On his lap sat the book he had been reading a few moments before, a blue hardback with the title of “Classification of Beasts: The Blues, The Grand Line and Beyond.” It was a widely interesting book, vivid in its descriptions, so much so that the reader could easily imagine the beings it detailed, even if they never seen anything like it. Yet, the pain that snaked all across Renero’s body made focusing on the book near impossible, able to only read a paragraph or so, before having to stop, the pain pulling him out of his mental safari.