In Turbulent Times

excerpt

‘Not capable enough, Clifford. Caitlin needs a doctor. Mother Ross says so herself. She’s worried. Mrs Starkey says she’ll give you anything you need from the doctor’s surgery.’
‘No, it’s all right,’ said Clifford. ‘I have everything I’m likely to need here.’ He dithered. Then he drew a deep breath and said, ‘Very well, Michael, I’ll come right away. Let me get my stuff together and put my rain-gear on.’
He climbed back upstairs to his room.
Hurry, Clifford, hurry, hurry, Michael kept saying to himself. For God’s sake, hurry.
At last Clifford came down again, buttoning his raincoat. He carried a black bag in one hand. He shouted down the hall, ‘Timmins, we’re leaving. I’ll be back in an hour or two. Don’t lock the gates.’ Then he turned to Michael and said with a levity lost on the distraught father-to-be, ‘Now, let’s be off to the rescue of this fair damsel in distress.’
He followed Michael to the main road and climbed into the trap. The shafts tipped up, the harness jingled and creaked, the pony snorted and tossed its wet head. Michael jerked the reins a couple of times and shouted. He turned the pony and trap around, and off they went, slowly at first, until the pony found its stride.
God, what a miserable night to be born, Clifford thought. He was nervous. He had already delivered three babies, but they were easy, straightforward births, the first two under supervision. This one sounded difficult. A breech birth at least. Perhaps a Caesarean. He would rather have kept clear of this ordeal but found it impossible to refuse. He had a reputation in the village where many already regarded him as the best new doctor in Belfast. The village was proud of him. This birth would enhance his reputation or shatter it like a dropped mirror. Clifford was worried in case it might go badly. As the rain-beaten cart bounced and swayed towards the MacLir house, Clifford frantically recalled everything he ought to know about breech births and Caesarean sections. By the time he and Michael arrived in the yard behind the house Clifford was confident he could handle any complication. His reputation was assured. It was not the village that was looking on, he thought with typical self-importance, it was the world.
As he rushed across the farmyard to the back door, Clifford slipped on a wet, muddy cobblestone and almost fell. He only just reached the door in time to check his forward fall with his free outstretched hand. That frightened him. Tonight he could not afford to be clumsy.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763270

Savages and Beasts

excerpt

Smiling from one side of his mouth to the other George
placed the plate on their table.
“Are you on duty this morning, Mary?” George asked her.
“No, not today,” she answered.
“Why don’t you go to the personnel eating room?” George
wondered aloud.
“I don’t like eating there, besides I never craved the full
breakfast…”
“I see,” George added and left them alone; he knew they
liked that.
Sister Helen and Father Peter appeared guiding the kids
in for their porridge. They all followed their lines and took their
seats, boys in one side of the eating area and girls on the other.
The livingness of the kids waked up the place and suddenly
everything seemed to make some sense, the tables, the benches,
the kitchen counters were the food was placed, the walls which
tuned their ears to grab whispers and soft words spoken between
the little savages against the stern voices of their two supervisors
who kept on saying, “quiet, quiet, take your food and sit down”
while they paced from one side of the hallway to the other perusing
both sides, make sure no one of these kids did anything that
they would disapprove.
Suddenly in all quietness a upheaval that broke the utter
silence, Marcus, who else would do such a thing, as he was horsing
around in his place he pushed the boy next to him with the
result of some porridge spilled on the table. The boy started
making a commotion, Father Peter rushed to their area and
ordered Marcus to get up take his bowl with his porridge and
step on the hallway, which the youth did, as always but soon as
he stepped in the open area between the two rows of benches a
hard slap from the hand of the priest struck the back of his neck;

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763602

Still Waters

excerpt

The circulating nurse in Theatre Three opened a package of suture
material and dropped the sterile contents onto Tyne’s scrub table.
“Better hurry, Tyne, Doctor Bentall is already scrubbing up. And he
has an intern with him, so you’ll probably have to hold the new boy’s
hand as well as Doctor Bentall’s.”
“Oh, Marjory, no one has to hold Doctor Bentall’s hand.” Tyne
chuckled as she secured the suture needle onto a holder.
“Maybe not, darn it. But a lot of us would like to, eh?” Marjory
Andrews’ eyes sparkled above her gauze mask as she opened a sterile
pack of sponges and handed them to Tyne.
“Not me,” Tyne said.
“Oh no, of course not you. You’re too wrapped up in that farmer
boy back in … where is it? Emblem?”
Tyne felt the colour rise in her cheeks, and was thankful for the
mask that covered most of her face. Pain stabbed at her chest, a pain
she had experienced daily since graduation night. Only during working
hours could she exorcise the ghosts that plagued her with every
thought of Morley. And now, Marjory had to remind her – right at
the start of a major scrub. But the circulating nurse could not know
about the break-up. Only Moe was privy to that information.
Tyne took a pack of abdominal sponges from Marjory. “Okay, let’s
do the count,” she said briskly, putting an end to the frivolous talk.
For the next few hours all the concentration of the two nurses, as
well as that of the student nurse who would soon be joining Tyne at
the scrub table, would be centred on the patient, the surgeon and the
procedure upon which he was about to embark.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763068