Miracle on Kaimotu Island

Home > Other > Miracle on Kaimotu Island > Page 10
Miracle on Kaimotu Island Page 10

by Marion Lennox


  He was dressed in green theatre garb. He might look young but he didn’t sound young, Ginny thought. He sounded every inch a doctor, like he knew exactly what he was doing.

  Thank God for emergency personnel. Thank God for helicopters. If she and Ben had been on their own...

  ‘You guys swear you’re doctors?’ Dave said, his tired face breaking into a slight smile. ‘You look like chimney sweeps to me. Was that what kept you?’

  ‘Digging the odd person out,’ Ben said. ‘We got here as fast as we could.’

  ‘Well, thank God for it,’ Dave said bluntly. ‘From now on...yeah, we need diggers but we need doctors more. I have a truckload of casualties coming in now. You ready to deal with them?’

  ‘Yes,’ they said in unison, and Dave grinned.

  ‘Excellent. You guys use the theatre inside the hospital—that’s what you’re familiar with. I’ll stay on triage out here—this is my territory. By the way, you might need to wash. We’ve set up a washroom over there—we’ve attached hoses to the garden tanks out back but use a bit more antiseptic than usual because Abby tells us the tank often holds the odd dead possum. We’re working on a safe water supply now.’

  He glanced up as a battered farm truck turned into the car park. ‘Here’s the next load,’ he said. ‘Let’s go.’

  * * *

  For the next eight hours Ginny and Ben scarcely had time to breathe.

  Luckily most of the injuries were minor, caused by flying debris and masonry. The most common presentation was lacerations. Most of the island homes were weatherboard with corrugated-iron roofs. If they’d been brick homes with slate or tile roofs, the injuries would have been more severe, but corrugated iron, crashing down in sheets, could slice to the bone. Added to that, people had crawled out of collapsed buildings, trying to get out as fast as they could, often unaware that they had been crawling over shattered glass and crockery.

  The wounds were caked with dust, and they couldn’t be stitched fast.

  Some people needed to be transferred to the mainland. Some would need plastic surgery to stop scarring for a lifetime, but there was enough work to hold Ben and Ginny in Theatre, working as hard and fast as they could.

  They worked side by side rather than together, seeing two patients at a time. They shared a nurse—Prue, the youngest of the island’s nurses—and they helped each other.

  It was hardly best medical practice to operate on two patients in the one small theatre but it meant help was always on hand. If one of them got into trouble, Ben helped Ginny or Ginny helped Ben. Ben’s surgical skills assisted Ginny, Ginny’s anaesthetic skills assisted Ben...

  And besides...

  It settled her, Ginny thought as she worked through the night. The day had been terrifying. Just the fact that she had Ben six feet away, a solid, reassuring presence, helped her to focus.

  There was no question that she was a doctor now. She’d walked away from medicine six months ago but now she was in medicine up to her neck.

  And for the first time in years she felt grateful to be a doctor.

  She’d helped Ben save Henry but she’d been almost resentful that she’d been hauled out of her reclusive shell. Here there was no resentment.

  She liked being able to help. She loved having the necessary skills.

  The knowledge was almost like a lightning bolt. She remembered the early days of training, working as an intern. She remembered the almost terrifying sensation of making a difference to people’s lives. The dependence on colleagues. The gut-wrenching pain of loss and the mind-blowing feeling of success. She remembered heading to the pub after work with a group of colleagues to unwind, joking about the macabre, understanding each other, knowing she’d be working side by side with them the next day.

  Like she was working side by side with Ben now.

  It had all stopped when she’d met James. Her social life had centred on him from that point on. She’d started specialist anaesthetic training.

  She’d still worked in a team in Theatre but the atmosphere had subtly changed. She had become the girlfriend of a senior consultant and James had often stopped by, to watch, to give a little advice, to make sure everyone in the theatre knew she was his woman.

  Why was she thinking of that now? She was cleaning slivers of glass from Bea Higgins’s knees. Bea was seven years old, she’d been having a day off school when the quake had hit because she’d needed to go to the dentist, and had ended up crawling out of the Higgins’s lean-to bathroom.

  ‘And Mum says I still have to go to the dentist,’ she said mournfully.

  ‘Cheer up,’ Ben said from the other side of the room. He was stitching an elderly farmer’s arm—Craig Robb had been trying to get his pigs out of their sty when sheets of corrugated iron had fallen and slashed. Farmer, not pig. ‘Doc Dunstan’s front porch has collapsed,’ he told Bea. ‘You might not get a dentist appointment for months.’

  ‘Cool.’ Bea grinned happily as Ginny dressed her cuts and grazes. She’d hurt when the anaesthetic wore off, Ginny thought, but kids bounced back. For most of these kids this earthquake would end up being an adventure.

  And for the rest of the island? The damage didn’t seem massive. There’d been no tsunami. There hadn’t been any reports of multiple deaths—three so far, and all of them elderly. Could the island get off so lightly?

  But there might well be more casualties. There were still the islanders who lived in outlying areas, where searchers hadn’t been able to reach. There was still a trapped school bus.

  There was still Henry.

  ‘Worry about what’s in front of you right now,’ Ben said.

  She flashed a glance at him and thought again, He knows me as no one else does.

  The thought was terrifying, yet she was suddenly no longer terrified. She was working side by side with him, and no matter what was happening in the outside world, she wasn’t terrified at all.

  * * *

  All his attention should be on his island. All his focus should be on deaths, injuries, damage.

  Instead, he was working alongside Ginny Koestrel and it felt...okay.

  As a seventeen-year-old he’d thought he loved her. Love was a pretty big word—a word he reserved for his family. There’d been a few women since Ginny, but not one he’d applied the ‘love’ word to.

  His mother had been suggesting he could get together with Abby. Abby was competent, a caring professional, pretty, smiley, a great mum to her little boy. ‘Does the fact that she has a child stop you being interested?’ his mother had asked him recently, and he’d laughed. It made not one whit of difference. He’d lived in a household of twelve kids. If he didn’t like kids he’d have gone nuts long since.

  So what had been stopping him? He and Abby had dated a couple of times—yeah, okay, just social functions like the hospital fundraiser where it was easier to have a partner—but they had still been dates.

  There’d been friendship and laughter, but not a single spark.

  And here was this woman, this stranger, really, as he hadn’t seen her for twelve years, working alongside him. She was a different person from the one he’d thought he’d been in love with all those years ago, yet sparks were flying everywhere.

  How could there be sparks when he was so tired?

  How could he hear her talk softly to Bea and crane his neck to hear, just to listen to her voice?

  How could he get close? How could he brush away all the wounds that had been inflicted on her—for he knew there were deep wounds. How could he help her move on?

  Move on towards him?

  * * *

  They ushered Craig and Bea out at the same time. Their two patients were welcomed into the arms of their relieved relatives, and there was a moment’s peace while they waited for Dave to direct them to the next need. The young nurse
, Prue, was almost dead on her feet. ‘Go home,’ Ben told her. ‘You’ve done brilliantly.’

  She left and Ben put his arms around Ginny and held her.

  ‘So have you,’ he said.

  They stood at the entrance to the makeshift emergency hospital, and for a moment all was silent.

  He kissed her lightly on her hair. ‘You’re doing a fantastic job, Dr Koestrel,’ he told her. ‘As a medical team, we rock.’

  She didn’t pull back. She was exhausted, she told herself as he tugged her closer. It was okay to lean on him.

  The queue outside had disappeared. Islanders were settling into the refuge centre or in some cases stubbornly returning to their homes. There’d still be myriad minor injuries to treat, she thought, but Dave hadn’t been waiting for them when they’d emerged this time.

  There was this moment to stand in this man’s arms and just...be.

  It couldn’t last. Of course it couldn’t. A truck arrived and a weary-looking Dave emerged from the back.

  ‘I need you to see two more patients and then I’m standing us all down,’ he said. ‘I’m dealing with a suspected early labour—I’ll stay with her until the team arrives to evacuate her. I think she’ll settle but I’m taking no chances.’

  ‘Who?’ Ben asked.

  ‘A tourist,’ Dave told her. ‘She was on a boat in the harbour when it hit.’ He grinned. ‘Which is something of a relief because the islanders want Ben first, Ginny as second best and me a poor last. But, as I said, it’s easing. We have paramedics who’ll stay on call for the rest of the night and I have another doctor flying in to take over from me. It’s four now. If anything dire happens we’ll call you out but you need to catch some sleep. The searchers will find more at first light so medically things will speed up again. Is there anywhere here you both can sleep?’

  ‘My apartment’s at the back of the hospital,’ Ben said. ‘If it’s anything like the rest of the hospital it’ll be unscathed. Ginny can stay with me.’

  ‘I can give you a bed in a tent if that’s not okay,’ Dave told her, but Ginny shook her head, even though the tent might be more sensible.

  But she didn’t feel sensible. She was still leaning against Ben. She still wanted to lean against him.

  But there were problems. She needed to focus on something other than this man’s arms.

  ‘Button...’ she started.

  ‘Whoops, I have a message about someone called Button,’ Dave told her, looking rueful. ‘One of the guys passed it on. The message is that Ailsa and Hannah said to tell you that Button and Shuffles are fast asleep and happy. They also said to tell you someone’s left a basket of kittens with Ailsa because their laundry’s collapsed and apparently Ailsa is a sucker for animals, so the message continues that Ailsa says Button would like a black one with a white nose. Button says she wants to call it Button, too.’

  He grinned, pleased with himself for remembering the full gist of the message, and Ginny found herself smiling, too. It was exactly the kind of message she needed to hear. She found herself sniffing and when Ben’s arm tightened around her she didn’t resist. How could she pull away?

  Weirdly, her world, which had been shaken to the core years before, the day James had got his diagnosis, or even earlier, she thought, maybe even the day her father and James had taken her to dinner and hammered into her that she was a fool not to specialise, a fool to keep working in the emergency medicine she loved, seemed, on this day of all days, to be settling.

  ‘You said...’ she managed. ‘You said...we have two more patients to see?’

  ‘Minor problems,’ Dave said. ‘The searchers have just swept the wharf. Brian Grubb was trapped in the co-op storeroom when the door shifted on its hinges. He’s cut his leg and needs an X-ray to eliminate a fracture to his ankle.

  ‘We also have a Mr Squid Davies—a venerable old gentleman. The search dogs found him under a pile of cray pots and they’ve brought him in, protesting. He’s had a bang on his head. I can’t see any sign of concussion but he didn’t have the strength to heave the pots off himself. He tells us he forecast the earthquake. He’s busy telling all and sundry, “I told you so.” Are you sure you can handle it?’

  Squid and his end-of-the-world forecasting. Could she handle it?

  She grinned at Ben and he grinned back.

  ‘It’ll be a pleasure to treat him,’ Ben said, and his smile warmed places inside her she hadn’t even known had been cold. ‘We might even concede we should have listened.’

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  BEN TOOK ON Brian; Ginny took on Squid. Squid was brought in on a stretcher, but he was sitting bolt upright, his skinny legs dangling down on either side.

  ‘I can walk, you fellas,’ he was protesting. ‘One hit on the head and you think you can treat me like a namby-pamby weakling.’

  ‘Indulge us,’ Ginny said, as the hefty paramedics transferred him smoothly to her examination couch. ‘Come on, Mr Davies, lie down and let me see that bump on your head.’

  ‘Since when have I been Mr Davies?’ Squid demanded. ‘I’m Squid. And you’re the Koestrel girl. Bloody uppity parents. Folks say you turned out all right, though.’

  ‘I think she’s all right,’ Ben said from the other side of the theatre. ‘What about you guys?’ he asked the paramedics. ‘Do you think she’s all right?’

  There were grunts of agreement from the two burly paramedics, from Brian and from Squid himself, and Ginny thought, wow, she’d been in an earthquake, she’d spent half a day digging people out from under rubble, she’d been working as an emergency doctor for hours...and they thought...

  ‘She’s cute,’ Squid decreed.

  ‘Nah,’ one of the paramedics said, eying her red hair with appreciation. ‘It’s politically incorrect to say cute. How about handsome? Handsome and flaming?’

  ‘You’ve got rocks in your head, all of you,’ Ginny said, as Ben chuckled. It was four in the morning. She felt punch-drunk. They all must be punch-drunk. ‘Speaking of heads, lie down, Squid, while I check yours.’

  ‘Won’t,’ said Squid.

  ‘Lie down or I take over,’ Ben growled, ‘and we’ll do the examination the hard way.’

  ‘You and whose army?’

  ‘Do you know how many soldiers we have outside? Lie down or we’ll find a fat one to sit on you. Now.’

  And there was enough seriousness in his tone to make Squid lie down.

  Someone—Margy?—had been organised enough to find the islanders’ health files and set them at hand. Ginny could see at a glance if there were any pre-conditions that could cause problems. She flicked through Squid’s file fast while Ben started work on Brian. Ben knew each patient inside out; he didn’t need their histories, but Ginny was wise enough to take care.

  She flipped through Squid’s history and did a double-take at his age. Ninety-seven.

  Prostate cancer. Treatment refused. Check-ups every six months or so, mostly or so, because regular didn’t seem to be in Squid’s dictionary.

  A major coronary event ten years ago.

  Stents and bypass refused.

  ‘There’s nothing wrong with me but a bump on the head,’ Squid said sourly. ‘There I was, minding me own business, when, whump, every cray pot in the shed was on top of me. I warned ’em. Don’t you stack ’em up there, I said, ’cos the big one’s coming. Didn’t I say the big one was coming, Doc?’

  ‘You did,’ Ben said wryly. ‘I would have thought, though, with your premonition, you would have cleared out of the way of the cray pots.’

  ‘I’m good but I’m not that good,’ Squid retorted. He’d submitted as Ginny had injected local anaesthetic around the oozing gash across his forehead but he obviously wasn’t worrying about his head. ‘I was right, though. Wasn’t I right, Doc? That German doc was right, too, heading for home
. But you stayed here. And you, too, miss,’ he said to Ginny. ‘Did you listen? No.’

  ‘Yeah, but I didn’t get hit on the head with cray pots,’ Ginny retorted. ‘So I must have done something sensible. Squid, you have fish scales in this wound!’

  ‘I was wearing me hat. There’s always fish scales in that hat. Dunno where it is now; expect I’ll have to go digging for it. Get ’em out for me, there’s a lass, and make it neat. I don’t want to lose me handsome exterior. Not but what I’m getting past it for the need for handsome,’ he added, swivelling on the table to look thoughtfully at Ben. ‘Not like you two. Not past it at all, not you two. At it like rabbits you were when you were kids. Going to take it up again now?’

  ‘We were not,’ Ginny retorted, ‘at it like rabbits.’ This night was spinning out of control. She was close to exhaustion, but also close to laughter. At it like rabbits?

  ‘You woulda been if that gimlet-eyed mother of yours would have let you,’ Squid retorted. ‘But now you can. Got a littlie, now, though. Does that make a difference, Doc?’ he demanded of Ben.

  ‘That is not,’ Ben said levelly, ‘any of your business.’

  ‘Island business is my business,’ Squid said happily. The local anaesthetic was taking hold and any pain that might have interfered with his glorious I-told-you-so attitude was fading fast. ‘That’s why I warned you. The big ’un’s coming. Did you listen? Not you. People are dead, Doc, ’cos they didn’t listen.’ He lay back, crossed his arms and his smile spread beatifically across his ancient face. ‘Told you so. Told you so, told you so, told you so.’

  ‘Ginny, could you give me a hand with Brian’s X-ray?’ Ben said, grinning across at Squid’s obvious bliss. ‘It’ll take a couple of moments for that anaesthetic to work, and I’d rather not call any of the nurses back. Squid, I want you to lie still and keep quiet. We have patients resting just through the canvas.’ Then, as Squid opened his mouth to protest, he put up a hand in a peremptory signal for him to stop.

 

‹ Prev