Kevin had told me about the two spider bites on his back that had been bothering him. I didn't realize what that meant until we the first morning in Harbin when he couldn't sit back in a chair because the bites hurt too much. When I made him show me his back, I was appropriately concerned by the red, swollen wounds. We called over Ginny and then the Blakes, who said we had better talk to a doctor. The SOS doctor (the company we can call for medical advice) said Kevin should go to the hospital to get it checked out. They recommended a hospital in Harbin, and we headed there that afternoon.
Ginny found one of her students to come and translate. The student "happened" to have a friend with her who was a medical student and spoke good English. She came along too. We figured the hospital couldn't be too bad if SOS recommended it, right? Hehe. I haven't been to very many hospitals in China, but this was definitely the worst one I'd seen. As we stood around waiting in the hallway, we discussed the images that were coming to mind.

1) The old medical hatch discovered in "Lost."
2) A makeshift hospital from World War II.
3) A really old mental institution I once visited in Kentucky (visited.wasn't admitted to. Really.)
4) Some horror movie involving scary abandon buildings.
The building was old and dim. The walls were dirty and cracked and pealing. Trash was scattered on the grungy floor. The air smelled of some mixture of iodine and stale urine. An old woman was wheeled past on a gurney, clutching her own dirty blankets (patients provide their own bedding and food and such) and staring into space. I was trying to be confident and play the reassuring role, but I was starting to feel slightly traumatized. We followed the students from room to room as they tried to find where we were supposed to go. We headed down the stairs into the basement, which looked like the upstairs except for being darker and windowless. We stumbled upon an airless hallway-like room filled with people lying on gurneys hooked up to IV's. Their relatives sat around nearby, staring at us with interest.
Finally we threaded our way back through the empty hallways to the correct doctor's room. The floor was scattered with old bandages and scattered yellow iodine cloths. The doctor swabbed the wound areas with iodine and quickly covered them with gauze, which promptly began to fall off. He told us the bites looked infected, that it was fairly serious, and that Kevin needed an IV (antibiotics - almost everything is administered through an IV).
Unfortunately, the doctor (apparently, the only doctor) who did IV's had already gone home. They said to come back in the morning. In the morning, we would be leaving on an 8am train, traveling all day and not getting back until Tonghua late at night. "Can we get the antibiotics in pills?" we asked. They don't really trust pills. They don't think they are as affective. We argued back and forth for a while, trying to explain our standpoint. "We can't get an IV tomorrow. We will be traveling. We know he needs the antibiotic, so wouldn't the pills be better than nothing?" Back and forth, back and forth. It was one of those times when you are speaking the same language without any actual communication. Finally, suddenly, our medical student friend said, "Okay, now we will go get the pills." Breakthrough.
We stopped by a pharmacy and then headed back to our friend's apartment. The bandages were already falling off, so our medical student friend cleaned the areas again and reapplied gauze. She did a better job than the doctor at the hospital. We think she will make a good doctor.
Now that I was done pretending to be confident and reassuring, I was starting to get shivers whenever I thought about the hospital. I was surprised to not have nightmares about it. I was still concerned about Kevin's back, which looked gross enough to make me slightly queasy every time I saw it. But we would figure something out. We were all glad to have lived through this experience. Once again, after two years in China, I should have known that this experience was far from over.