"Where is everyone?" I asked as I followed her, glancing into each of the rooms we passed, noticing that each was almost empty.
"Well, since they decided they were shutting down the camp and sending you lot out to the front line, things have been changing." She huffed as she reached the room she was after and pushed open the door, gesturing for me to go through.
"Wait, so they are shutting the camp down?"
"The government can't afford to keep this place running anymore. It's always been the most rundown base we've had. I would know, I've been through many." Glenda raised an eyebrow at me and pointed at a small wooden bench against the wall. "Sit." She ordered and turned around to face a desk, rummaging through a stack of papers as I did what she requested. "It's a recent development. This 'decision' of theirs. To be honest, I don't think the General had any say about it, the orders came from higher up." She took a breath. "Those rooms are almost empty because the sick soldiers have been transferred."
"Transferred." I repeated, taking all of this information in. "Well then why are there still some people here?"
Glenda stopped what she was doing and turned to face me, crossing her arms over her chest. "Those soldiers aren't going to last more than two days. They won't make it to another infirmary, let alone the front line. There's nothing we can do for them, so they stay."
"Either way they die. We die." I pointed out slightly irritated.
A strange silence settled between us as Glenda's eye slipped to the floor, obviously not happy with the situation, that she couldn't do anything about it. After a moment, she stood straight and turned back around, flicking through papers until she discovered what she was looking for. "Your x-rays proved to be positive. No fractured ribs, or broken bones." She announced, pulling out an x-ray and attaching it to a light box on the wall so we could see what she was talking about. "Although some of those bruises are caused by something deeper, so I would like to try do an MRI Scan on your chest, just to make sure I'm not missing anything."
I looked over the x-ray as she spoke. Where was this supposed to lead to? This scan. Was it going to find out what was wrong, to heal me just so I can go and die? And there was Glenda, standing so calm as she spoke, like she'd said all of this before, like this happened all the time. Everyone in this camp was sentenced to death and she was just going to move on to another camp, to a new base. Safe from all of this crap, simply because our government can't afford it.
"There's no point." I scoffed and she looked at me. "There's no point because in less than a week I'll be on that front line and I'll be dead. Along with hundreds of other soldiers from this hellhole. It doesn't matter if there's something wrong with me or if there's not, because I'm going to die anyway." I stood up, not bothering to look back as I stormed out of her office, past the rooms that held the dying and out into the night.
Too many words were running through my head. Too much information and anger.