Welcome to the newest story of the Quaranteam universe! After reading CorruptingPower's epic and continuing saga, plus its spin-offs (both by CorruptingPower and by BreakTheBar, AgathonWrites, BirchesLovesBooks, SilverRyden, RonanJWilkerson, and more), I wanted to make my own contribution to it. Much to my shock, he let me. Thus, here we are.
Then again, I'm me. Many of you reading this will be familiar with my particular slant on things, and rest assured you will not be disappointed. This has been fun to imagine, and I anticipate it will be just as fun to write. Without further ado, let me introduce Quaranteam: Remote Work
—-
Chapter 1: Social Studies
Adam knew he was asleep, and it was a nice feeling. Floating along in the black void of his brain, no worries, no pain, he wanted to hold onto it for as long as he could. Hold onto the nothing, keep resting for as long as his alarm would let him.
The first thing to successfully object to the infinite void was a beep. A beeping, rather, as it kept on spitefully insisting that Adam was not actually alone in his brain. It was off, though. It wasn't his alarm, it wasn't the warning that he would need to rapidly make himself presentable to sit in front of a camera and lecture another day. Perhaps it was Saturday today, and he forgot? Either way, he resolved to ignore it as unimportant. The painless void still held him close.
Next was a feeling of weight. Slowly, gradually increasing, it was like a small child had crawled up onto his chest and decided to sit there... a small child that was rapidly maturing into an adult who was ready to be a sumo wrestler. The weight became a pressure, pressing him down, making it hard to breathe.
Adam coughed. He could not have resisted it even if he'd had enough warning to try. That cough brought with it more intrusions into the once-comfortable blackness. His throat suddenly felt like it had been scrubbed with sand. Another cough, and the feeling became rather more like he had swallowed broken glass instead. Like something was trying to invade his throat as he slept.
The darkness lightened by half-degrees, and as it did more sensations flooded in. Mostly not good ones. Deep pains in his arms, his chest, his legs, his back. A pounding headache like the worst hangover he'd ever had. Itching at the corners of his eyes and his mouth. Itching of a different kind over a lot of his skin, as if rough cloth was there. Suddenly, in a rush, his eyes opened and the comfortable darkness bade him farewell. Agonizing reality greeted him.
The light resolved itself to sterile hospital white. The beeping of monitors accelerated as he emerged to wakefulness, as every inch of his body felt individually abused. Something was in his nose. Something was in his arms. His choked cry and coughs combined with the suddenly-shifting displays to bring someone running. The person's attire chilled Adam to the bone, because none of their skin was visible. At all.
The stark white suit was obviously hazmat in nature. Shiny coating, easy to clean. Full mask, hooded to cover hair and neck. Air tank, gloves, the works. It seemed to almost flow with the sterile walls. A tinny female voice sounded, translated from the inside of the getup to the outside. "Sir, calm down! You're in the hospital, very sick! I'm here to help you. You are in the hospital, recovering." While repeating this, she briskly moved over and grabbed at something on his face. With horror, he felt her
pull
at something he was barely able to tell was there, and he felt the horrible sensation of something sliding up his throat the wrong way, sliding out of his chest. It was out, and his coughs changed to something more normal in his ears. Throat still felt like he'd tried to eat particularly spicy barbed wire. And didn't chew it enough.
When he spoke, his voice sounded foreign to himself, coming out in a harsh, froggy rasp so unlike the smooth tenor he so often used to control his classes. "Where am I? What happened?" Everything was dragging. Every movement felt like he was having to push himself with all of his might.
"I should be asking you the same thing. Let's start with the easy part. Please, tell me your name, job, and the town and state you live in."
He had to think for a moment. His head was going slow, feeling like it was trying to drag individual thoughts through a bowl of molasses to get them to the surface. "I'm... Adam Jeffries. Civics teacher, I live in Yelm, Washington."
"Oh, good. That will make the next bits easier." The woman kept looking at various bits, bobs, and monitors.
"Will you at least tell me why I'm in the hospital? Why are you in full hazmat?"
She seemed to ignore his request entirely, much to his frustration. "What is the last thing you remember, Mr. Jeffries?"
...
a pounding, a breaking sound, a man's voice not his own, in the tiny apartment which had been so lonely for so long...
"I... ah... I think I was burglarized. Someone broke into my home. That doesn't explain all of... this..."
...