Flashback (1988) (46 page)

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Authors: Michael Palmer

BOOK: Flashback (1988)
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“Are you going to do it?”

“Suzanne, I don’t have any choice. Of course I’m going to do it. Did you find out who’s on for orthopedics?”

“Sam Christian’s the only one around, but he’s in the O.R. over at Clarion County. Apparently he just started an open reduction.”

“Damn. Well, listen, keep your eye on the Judge, okay? I’m going to call John Burns in Concord. He’s an excellent neurosurgeon, and with that Beechcraft of his, he can be up here in an hour or less. Meanwhile, go ahead, call in the radiologist and get a CT scan of the area. See if we can assess the extent of bleeding. This day is really the pits, do you know that?”

“Zack?”

“What?”

“The Judge and Frank told me what kind of a person this Robillard is. If he’s really as bad off as you say, maybe you should accept the inevitable and devote your energy to making sure your father’s all right.”

“Suzanne, I can’t believe you’re saying that.”

“Really? Well, what if it were
me
lying in there with a piece of metal up against my spinal cord? Zack, this is your father we’re talking about.”

“Suzanne, that man in there’s dying.”

“You know, there are such things in this world as love and loyalty. They’re allowed. According to some people, they’re even worthwhile virtues to have. Even physicians are allowed to be human. That man you want to operate on steals and beats up on people, Zachary. That’s what he does. The police say that the cab of his pickup was littered with empty beer cans.…”

Zack glared at her.

“I can’t believe you’re saying that. I just can’t believe it.”

He turned and stalked into the room where his father lay beneath the X-ray camera.

“Dad, how’re you doing?”

“My back aches, and my legs feel a little heavy.”

Zack tapped his reflex hammer against the Judge’s Achilles’ tendons, documenting once again through the reassuring flick of each foot that the ankle to spinal cord and spinal cord-to-ankle circuits were intact.

“Wiggle your toes, please.… Good. Other foot … good.”

“What’s the story?” the Judge asked.

“Well, your wrist is broken, but it will keep until Sam Christian gets done at Clarion County. However, that piece of metal in your back ought to come out soon.”

“I thought so. You going to do it?”

Zack hesitated, and then shook his head, triggering a jackhammer pain between his eyes.

“No, Dad,” he said. “I’ve got to do that man first or he’s dead. Besides, we’re not encouraged to operate on our own family if we can avoid it. I’m going to call John Burris up from Concord.”

“I want you.”

“Judge, please, don’t make this any harder. You’re quite stable right now. Robillard’s dying.”

“Let him die.”

“I can’t do that.…”

Clayton Iverson stared stonily at the ceiling.

In the silence, Zack became aware of others in the room. He turned. Frank and Suzanne stood just inside the doorway, watching and listening.

“Suzanne, please arrange the CT scan,” Zack said, trying to ignore the disapproval in her eyes. “I’ve got to call Burris and then get into the O.R. I can see by your face what you want to say to me. Don’t bother. I’m doing the one thing we are taught always to do—I’m doing what I think is right.… Judge, I
love you, and fil be keeping track of things. With luck, by the time Burris gets here I’ll be done with what I have to do, and I can assist him. Meanwhile, just hang in there.”

He turned and left, brushing past Suzanne. She followed him for several steps, but then, shaking her head in resignation and frustration, headed for the radiology office.

“Mas here,” Frank said, approaching the bed. “Judge, I’m sorry. I tried to help him see reason.”

“Forget it, Frank,” Clayton Iverson said. “Just leave me alone.”

“But Judge—”

“Dammit, Frank, I said leave me alone.”

Nothing felt normal or comfortable. The room, O.R. 4, seemed far too warm, the surgical team far too quiet. The blades and scissors and drill bits were too dull, the hemostats and needle holders unacceptably stiff or loose.

Zachary struggled to ignore his throbbing headache and his sodden scrub suit and to focus on the situation at hand. The circulating nurse, no longer waiting for his request, was mopping perspiration from his forehead and cheeks every two or three minutes.

They were nearly an hour into the Burr hole drainage procedure on Beau Robillard, and still there was no word that John Burris had arrived from Concord. Down the hall, in O.R. 2, a second surgical team stood ready.

“Valerie,” Zack said to the circulator, “could you go on down to the E.R., please, and see what you can find out about Dr. Burris. He should have been here by now.”

Beneath his green paper mask, Zack’s jaw was clenched. He was right in what he was doing, dammit. He was a physician, a surgeon, not judge and jury. Why, then, was everyone acting as if his decision were some sort of mortal sin? Surely they understood that he wasn’t choosing this mars life over his fathers. The Judge was stable, perfectly stable. Beau Robillard was dying.

“Pressures down a bit,” Jack Pearl cautioned.

The words brought Zack’s thoughts back in tune with his hands.

“Feel free to transfuse him a unit if you need to,” he responded. “I’ve aspirated a fair amount through these Burr holes, but his brains not showing any signs of reexpanding. If
there’s no action in a few more minutes, were going to have to push ahead with a full craniotomy.”

The circulating nurse, Valerie, reentered the O.R. through the scrub room.

“Dr. Iverson,” she said, “there’s a problem downstairs.”

Zack shuddered.

“Yes, go ahead.…”

“I was told to tell you that Judge Iverson’s feet have gone numb. He’s unable to move his toes.”

“Who’s with him?”

The urgency in his voice bordered on panic. He glanced down at the persisting space between Beau Robillard’s skull and brain surface, and begged himself to calm down.

“Dr. Cole and Dr. Marshfield,” the woman answered.


And where in the hell is—”

Zack breathed deeply and exhaled.

“Where is Dr. Burris?” he asked more evenly.

The eyes of everyone on the surgical team were fixed on him. There was, they all knew, little chance he could break scrub and leave the operating room without killing Robillard.

“The weather’s gotten worse. Apparently there was a problem with Dr. Burris’s plane,” the nurse explained. “He’s gotten someone to fly him up, but they lost some time.”

“How much till he’s here?”

“Twenty minutes.”

“Damn,” Zack murmured.

It would take another hour to complete the craniotomy—the open procedure he now felt certain was necessary. And even with the procedure, Beau Robillard’s chances of survival as anything more than a vegetable were growing dimmer each second.

“Have them give Judge Iverson five amps of Narcan IV and get him up to the operating room now.”

“Five? But the usual dose is—”

“Dammit, I know what the usual dose is.” He took a deep breath. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to snap at you. The high dose is to help keep down the swelling in his cord. Also, please ask Dr. Cole if she can come up here and tell me exactly what’s going on.”

In truth, Zack had little doubt as to what was going on. An epidural bleed, not predictable at all from his initial exam, was compressing the Judge’s spinal cord.

Had he missed something? Had there been a clue?

Uncertainty and self-doubt hardened around Zack’s hands like cement.

With Burris less than twenty minutes away could any significant change be effected now by scrubbing out on Robillard and going after the Judges bleed?

Zack gazed down at the man for whose life he had chosen to be responsible. Having made that choice, did he even have the right now to renege on it?

The doors to the O.R. burst open, and Suzanne, dressed in scrubs, stepped inside.

“The Judge can’t move his legs,” she said. “Burris is about to land. A cruiser’s waiting for him at the airport.”

“Reflexes?”

“A flicker,” she said. “It would seem, Doctor, that unless John Burris works a minor miracle, your father might well end up paralyzed from the waist down.”

At that moment, Jack Pearl called out, “Dr. Iverson, his rate’s dropping. I can’t get a pressure.”

“Give him an amp of epinephrine.”

“Already done.”

“Get ready for CPR.”

“Pulse is dropping. Dropping more.”

“Damn … Begin CPR.” ‘

“Doctor, he’s straight line.…”

“Another amp of epi. Give him another amp of epi.…”

28

It was after two in the morning. The fine, misty rain drifting over the valley for hours had sapped most of the warmth remaining from the day.

Zack lay sprawled on his living room floor, staring at nothing in particular. The only illumination in the room was from half a dozen candles and the red and green lights on his stereo receiver.

For the two hours since his return from the hospital, he had been listening to Mendelssohn and Mahler, talking almost nonstop to Cheapdog, and drinking—at first several beers, then beer plus shots of Wild Turkey, and finally, the 110-proof Wild Turkey alone.

“I didn’t ask mush, y’know, Cheap? … Peace and quiet, some rocks to climb, a place to do my work without any hassles, the chance to make a difference.… Don’t look at me that way. I know I said that before. So what? … You’re the dog, so you just have to sit there and listen.… That’s the way it is…

Zack could count on the fingers of one hand the number of major-league drinking bouts he had ever had, but he felt determined to add this night to the list.

Beau Robillard had survived his cardiac arrests on the operating table, only to experience several more arrests in the recovery room. Zack had called off the resuscitation after intensive efforts failed to bring back any functional cardiac activity.

In retrospect, given the extent of the cerebral contusion and hemorrhage Zack had discovered during surgery, it seemed that the die was cast for Robillard the moment the side of his head had connected with whatever it had.

Unfortunately, in the heat of battle, with no time to spare and a life on the line, there was simply no way for him to know that ahead of time.

“… You know what medicine’s like, boy? ’S like you come
to rely on this wonderful woman who has promised you that if you treat her right, she’ll always be there when you need her.… So you do.… You study, and no matter how exhausted you are, you don’t take any shortcuts.… And then, when you need her the most, when your own goddamn fathers involved, you follow the system and use your clinical judgment, and do just what you’re supposed to do, and
poof!
She’s gone.… Gone! Damn women … Damn medicine …

Zack had pronounced Beau Robillard dead just as John Burris was completing the removal of a jagged chunk of rusty metal from deep within the muscles of Clayton Iverson’s back. Although there was no evidence that the fragment had pierced the dural lining of the spinal canal, apparently there had been some impairment of blood flow to the cord, because the Judges paralysis had progressed and was now being regarded by Burris as total paraplegia.

Whether the condition was permanent or not, Burris would not speculate, although both he and Zack knew all too well that the prognosis following such a development was not good.

Word of Zack’s decision, the Judge’s paralysis, and Beau Robillard’s death had spread through the hospital like wildfire. That Robillard’s blood alcohol level had come back well below that of legal intoxication, while the Judge’s was above the 0.1 cutoff, was a fact lost in the rumors and the stories of the accident, and the virtually universal condemnation of Zack’s disloyalty to his father.

Suddenly, it seemed, there was not a soul in all of Ultramed-Davis who did not have a bone or two to pick with Beaudelaire Robillard, Jr., nor one who had not been helped at one time or another by Judge Clayton Iverson.

Throughout the hideous evening, which ended with a tense, one-way conversation at his father’s bedside, Zack did not hear so much as one word of support from anyone for the difficulty of his position or the Tightness of his decision.

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