“I thought…”
“The problem is, you didn’t! If you ever wake me up again in the middle of the night for a heartburn case, I’ll have your ass. You understand that?”
Paige stood there stiffly, her face grim.
“Give her some antacid, doctor,” Lawrence Barker said sarcastically, “and you’ll find that she’s cured. I’ll see you at six o’clock for rounds.”
Paige watched him storm out.
When Paige stumbled back to her cot in the on-call room, she thought, I’m going to kill Lawrence Barker. I’ll do it slowly. He’ll be very ill. He’ll have a dozen tubes in his body. He’ll beg me to put him out of his misery, but I won’t. I’ll let him suffer, and then when he feels better…that’s when I’ll kill him!
Chapter Fifteen
Paige was on morning rounds with the Beast, as she secretly referred to Dr. Barker. She had assisted him in three cardiothoracic surgeries, and in spite of her bitter feelings toward him, she could not help but admire his incredible skill. She watched in awe as he opened up a patient, deftly replaced the old heart with a donor heart, and sewed him up. The operation took less than five hours.
Within a few weeks, Paige thought, that patient will be able to return to a normal life. No wonder surgeons think they’re gods. They bring the dead back to life.
Time after time, Paige watched a heart stop and turn to an inert piece of flesh. And then the miracle would occur, and a lifeless organ would begin to pulsate again and send blood through a body that had been dying.
One morning, a patient was scheduled for a procedure to insert an intraaortic balloon. Paige was in the operating room assisting Dr. Barker. As they were about to begin, Dr. Barker snapped, “Do it!”
Paige looked at him. “I beg your pardon?”
“It’s a simple procedure. Do you think you can handle it?” There was contempt in his voice.
“Yes,” Paige said tightly.
“Well, then, get on with it!”
He was infuriating.
Barker watched as Paige expertly inserted a hollow tube into the patient’s artery and threaded it up into the heart. It was done flawlessly. Barker stood there, without saying a word.
To hell with him, Paige thought. Nothing I could ever do would please him.
Paige injected a radiopaque dye through the tube. They watched the monitor as the dye flowed into the coronary arteries. Images appeared on a fluoroscopy screen and showed the degree of blockage and its location in the artery, while an automatic motion-picture camera recorded the X-rays for a permanent record.
The senior resident looked at Paige and smiled. “Nice job.”
“Thank you.” Paige turned to Dr. Barker.
“Too damned slow,” he growled.
And he walked out.
Paige was grateful for the days that Dr. Barker was away from the hospital, working at his private practice. She said to Kat, “Being away from him for a day is like a week in the country.”
“You really hate him, don’t you?”
“He’s a brilliant doctor, but he’s a miserable human being. Have you ever noticed how some people fit their names? If Dr. Barker doesn’t stop barking at people, he’s going to have a stroke.”
“You should see some of the beauties I have to put up with.” Kat laughed. “They all think they’re God’s gift to pussies. Wouldn’t it be great if there were no men in the world!”
Paige looked at her, but said nothing.
Paige and Kat went to check on Jimmy Ford. He was still in a coma. There was nothing they could do.
Kat sighed. “Dammit. Why does it happen to the good guys?”
“I wish I knew.”
“Do you think he’ll make it?”
Paige hesitated. “We’ve done everything we can. Now it’s up to God.”
“Funny. I thought we were God.”
The following day when Paige was in charge of afternoon rounds, Kaplan, a senior resident, stopped her in the corridor. “This is your lucky day.” He grinned. “You’re getting a new medical school student to take around.”
“Really?”
“Yeah, the IN.”
“IN?”
“Idiot nephew. Dr. Wallace’s wife has a nephew who wants to be a doctor. They threw him out of his last two schools. We’ve all had to put up with him. Today it’s your turn.”