appendix has picked up on his nerves, and she too looks toward me in mute appeal. I could, and it would go wellâundoubtedly better than itâs about to go. Iâve started IVs on several of the techs for practice. âHey, Elena, find my veinâ is a pretty weird pickup line, but hospital techs have to be creative.
Iâm not allowed to start IVs on patients, though. No IVs and no medications. I wonder how this pair would feel if they knew Iâm only a high school student, bussed to the hospital on alternate school days to work here for class credit. There are four of us students at the hospital this semester: two in Labor and Delivery and two here in the ER.
No need to tell these fearful people that their âexpertâ is a schoolgirl, though. Theyâre already having a rough day. So I give them both my most reassuring smile.
âYouâll do fine,â I tell Private Henning. âIâll talk you through it.â
A couple of false starts, and Private Henning accomplishes his task. That actually went pretty well. The cluster of nervous newbies has re-formed by the dry-erase board. Private Henning goes to join them, but I notice that heâs already walking a little taller.
A short, dark-haired man stomps to the door of Room Five. His scrubs are patched, and his lab coat is so wrinkled, it looks like heâs been sleeping in it. He surveys the herd of newbies with a furious frown, but his face clears when he spots me.
âElena! Good!â he barks. âGet over here right now! I need assistance!â
âYes, Dr. T.â
Dr. T. is from somewhere in the former Soviet Union. Heâs a fantastic doctor, but his bedside manner is nonexistent: he takes offense just as readily as he gives it. Heâs already had a run-in with a patient today, but he handled it surprisingly well. A beefy man with chest pains roared with anger and refused to be treated by him: âI didnât come here to see some damn Polack!â
To my amazement, Dr. T. went away like a lamb and transferred the patient to another doctor. It turned out that he and the beefy man were secretly in agreement. He told me, âI would not let a Polish doctor treat me, either.â
Now I join Dr. T. in Room Five, where a big young Marine is sitting on the examining table. Heâs stripped to the waist, and his pecs and biceps are a thing of much work and preoccupation if not beauty. He has pale blond fuzz on his head, and across the baby-pink skin of his shoulder is a skeleton riding a Harley. With him is another big young Marineâpossibly his boss.
Dr. T. is an avid doodler. While heâs talking with the Marines, heâs scribbling away on his pad of paper.
âDraining an abscess is very painful,â he says. âI can perform it here, but I would strongly recommend that you get a surgical consult.â
I take a few steps farther into the room and scan the patient. On his back is what appears to be a giant red pimple. We see two or three of these a day. They go deep into the tissue and can even cause gangrene. The skin inflammation is only the tip of the iceberg.
But the Marine looks at his Marine friend, and they both burst out laughing.
âDude, Iâve been in the
desert
!â he scoffs. âI think I can handle a little
zit
!â
âVery well,â says Dr. T. Heâs doodling daggers and harpoons on his sketchpad.
I wash again, don new gloves, and lay out the sterile kit. Five minutes later, Iâm up to my knuckles in the Marineâs back, wiping away blood so Dr. T. can see what heâs doing.
â
SHIT!
â roars the Marine, gripping his friendâs hand so hard that itâs white.
â
SHIT!
â roars the other Marine in agreement, and probably in almost as much pain. Only once did I make the mistake of offering my hand for a patient to hold through a procedure. The poor guy almost broke it.
Behind Dr. T.âs safety
Humberto Fontova
Suzanne Downes
Chloe Cole
Sandra Brown
Amber Garza
Elizabeth Lee
Joe R. Lansdale
Tori Carrington, Leslie Kelly, Janelle Denison
John Marsden
Marliss Melton