Being an academic House affiliated with the BMS, the House of God had a Visit for each ward team: a member of the Privates or the Slurpers, who held teaching rounds every day. Our Visit was George Donowitz, a Private who'd been pretty good in the prepenicillin era. The patient presented was a generally healthy young man who'd been admitted for routine tests of his renal function. My BMS, Levy, presented the case, and when Donowitz grilled him about diagnoses, the BMS, straight from the library of obscure diagnoses, said âamyloidosis.'
âTypical,' muttered the Fat Man as we gathered around the patient's bed, âtypical BMS. A BMS hears hoofbeats outside his window, the first thing he thinks of is a zebra. This guy's uremic from his recurrent childhood infections that damaged his kidneys. Besides, there's no treatment for amyloid, anyway.'
âAmyloid?' asked Donowitz. âGood thought. Let me show you a bedside test for amyloid. As you know, people with the disease bruise easily, very easily indeed.'
Donowitz reached down and twisted the skin on the patient's forearm. Nothing happened. Puzzled, he said something about âsometimes you have to do it a bit harder' and took hold of the skin, wadded it up, and gave it a tremendous twist. The patient gave a yelp, leaped up off the mattress, and began to cry with pain. Donowitz looked down and found that he'd ripped a big chunk of flesh from the guy's arm. Blood was squirting from the wound. Donowitz turned pale and didn't know what to do. Embarrassed, he took the piece of flesh and tried to put it back, patting it down as if he could make it stay in place. Finally, mumbling, âI . . . I'm so sorry,' he ran out of the room. With a cool expertise the Fat Man put a gauze compression bandage on the wound. We left.
âSo what did you learn?' asked Fats. âYou learned that uremic skin is brittle and that the House Privates stink. What else? What do we have to look out for in this poor bastard now?'
The BMSs ventured several zebras, and Fats told them to shut up. Potts and I went blank.
âInfection,' said Chuck. âIn uremia you gotta watch for infection.'
âExactly,' said Fats. âBacteria City. We'll culture for everything. If it hadn't been for Donowitz, that guy would be going home tomorrow. Now, if he lives, it'll be weeks. And if he knew about this, it would be Malpractice City.'
At this thought the BMSs perked up again. The BMS now comprised a majority of minority groups, and âSocial Medicine' was a hot ticket. The BMSs wanted to tell the patient so he could sue.
âIt won't work,' said Fats, â 'cause the worse the Private, the better the bedside manner, and the higher the patient's regard. If a doctor buys the TV illusion of “the doctor,” so does the patient. How can the patient know which are the “Double O” Privates? No way.'
â“Double O”?' I asked.
âLicensed to kill,' said Fats. âTime for lunch. We'll see from the cultures where Donowitz last stuck his finger before trying to murder that poor uremic
schlump
.'
The Fat Man was right. Colorful and esoteric bacteria grew out of the wound, including one species that was native only to the rectum of the domestic duck. Fats got excited about this, wanting to publish. âThe Case of Duck's Ass Donowitz.' The patient flirted with death but pulled through. He was discharged a month later, thinking it usual, even a necessary part of his successful course of treatment in the House, for the skin to have been ripped off his arm by his dear and glorious physician.
When the Fat Man went to lunch and we did not, the terror returned. Maxine asked me to write an order for aspirin for Sophie's headache, and as I started to sign my name, I realized I was responsible for any complications, and I stopped. Had I asked Sophie if she was allergic to aspirin? Nope. I did. She was not. I started to sign the order, and stopped. Aspirin causes ulcers. Did I want to have this poor LOL in NAD bleed out and die from an ulcer? I would wait for the Fat Man and ask him if it was all right. He returned.
âI've got a question for you, Fats.'
âI've got an answer. I've always got an answer.'
âIs it all right to give Sophie two aspirin for her headache?'
Looking at me as if I were from another planet, Fats said, âDid you hear what you just asked me?'
âYes.'
âRoy, listen. Mothers give aspirin to babies. You give aspirin to yourself. What is this, anyway?'
âI guess I'm just afraid to sign my name to the order.'
âShe's indestructible. Relax. I'm sitting right here, OK?'
He put his feet up on the counter and opened
The Wall Street Journal
. I wrote the order for the aspirin, and feeling dumb, went to see a gorilla named Zeiss. Forty-two, mean, with bad heart disease, Zeiss needed a new IV put in. I introduced myself, and tried. My hand shook, and in the hot room I got sweaty, and the drops of sweat plopped onto the sterile field. I missed the vein, and Zeiss yelped. The second time, I went in more slowly, and Zeiss squirmed, moaned, and cried out:
âHelp, nurse! Chest pain! Get me my nitroglycerin!'
Terrific, Baschâyour first cardiac patient and you are about to give him a heart attack.
âI'm having a heart attack!'
Wonderful. Call a doctor. Waitâyou are a doctor.
âAre you real doctor or what? My nitros! Fast!'
I put a tablet under his tongue. He told me to get lost. Crushed, I wished I could.
Filled with great moments in medicine, the day wore on. Potts and I clustered around the Fat Man like ducklings around a mother duck. Fats sat there, feet up, reading, ostensibly into the world of stocks and bonds and commodities, and yet, like a king who knows his kingdom as well as he knows his own body, who feels the rages of a distant flood in the pulsating of his own kidneys, and the bounty of a harvest in his own full gut, he seemed to have a sense for any problem on the ward, instructing us, forewarning us, helping Potts and me. And once, only once, he movedâfast, unashamedly a hero.
A scheduled admission, named Leo, had arrived for Potts. Gaunt, white-haired, friendly, a little breathless, Leo stood at the nursing station, suitcase at his feet. Potts and I introduced ourselves and chatted with him. Potts was relieved that here at last was a patient who could talk to him, who was not deathly sick, and who would not slug him. What Potts and I didn't know was that Leo was about to attempt to die. In the midst of a chuckle at one of Potts's jokes, Leo turned blue and fell down on the floor. Potts and I stood there mute, still, frozen, unable to move. My one thought was âHow embarrassing for poor Leo.' Fats glanced over, leaped to his feet, yelled out âThump him!' which we were too panicked to do and which I thought would be rather melodramatic, ran over to us, thumped Leo, breathed Leo, closed-chest-cardiac-massaged Leo, IV'd Leo, and organized with a cool virtuosity Leo's cardiac arrest and Leo's return from the world of the dead. A large crowd had arrived to assist in the arrest, and Potts and I had been pushed out of the action. I felt embarrassed and inept. Leo had been laughing at our jokes, his attempt to die was surreal, and I had denied that it existed. Fats was marvelous, his handling of the arrest a work of art.
When Leo had returned to life, Fats walked us back to the nursing station, put his feet back up, opened the paper again, and said, âAll right all right so you panicked and you feel like shit. I know. It's awful and it's not the last time neither. Just don't forget what you saw. LAW NUMBER THREE: AT A CARDIAC ARREST, THE FIRST PROCEDURE IS TO TAKE YOUR OWN PULSE.'
âI guess I wasn't worried about him because he was an elective admission and not an emergency,' said Potts.
âElective doesn't mean shit around here,' said Fats. âLeo would have died. He's young enough to die, you know.'
âYoung?' I asked. âHe looks seventy-five.'
âFifty-two. Congestive heart failure's worse than most cancers. It's ones his age that die. There's no way he'll become a gomer, not with a disease like that. And that's the challenge of medicine: gomers gomers gomers where you can't do anything for them, and then, suddenlyâWHAM!âin comes Leo, a lovely guy who can die, and you gotta move fast to save him. It's like what Joe Garagiola said last night about Luis Tiant: “He gives you all his herky-jerky stuff and then, when he comes in with his heater, it looks a whole yard faster.”'
âHis heater?' asked Potts.
âOh, Jesus,' said Fats. âHis fast ballâHIS FAST BALL!âwhere did they get you guys, anyway?'
By that time I was wondering the same thing, and so was Potts. Both of us felt incompetent. For some reason, Chuck was different. He didn't need help. He knew what to do. Later that afternoon I asked him about how he seemed so competent already.
âEasy, man. See, I never read nuthin'. I just did it all.'
âYou never read anything?'
âJust about them red ants. But I know how to put in a big line, tap a chestâyou name it, I done it. Ain't you?'
âNope. None of that,' I said, thinking about my piddling around with Sophie's aspirin.
âWell, man, what all did you do at the BMS?'
âBooks. I know all there is to know about medicine in books.'
âWell, it looks like that was your failing, man, that right there. Like my not joinin' the army. Maybe I still . . .'
Standing in the streaming July light was a nurse, the afternoon and evening nurse. She stood with her hands on her hips, reading the med cards, legs apart, rocking first one foot on its lateral edge, and then the other. The sharp sunlight made her costume almost transparent, and her legs flowed in smooth lines from her thin ankles and calves all the way up to where all seams meet. She wore no slip, and through her starched white dress I could see the bright patterns on her panties. She knew they would show through. Through her dress showed her bra strap, with its pleading unhookable hook. Her back was to us. Who could know about the front? I half-wished she would never turn around, never spoil the imagined breasts, the imagined face.
âHey, man, that's somethin' else.'
âI love nurses,' I said.
âWell, man, what is it about nurses?'
âIt must be all that white.'
She turned around. I gasped. I blushed. From her ruffled front unbuttoned down past her clavicular notch showing her cleavage, to her full tightly held breasts, from the red of her nail polish and lipstick to the blue of her lids and the black of her lashes and even the twinkly gold of the little cross from her Catholic nursing school, she was a rainbow in a waterfall. After a day in the hot smelly House, after a day of being whacked by the Privates and the Slurpers and the gomers, she was a succulent chilled wedge of an orange squirting in my mouth. She came over to us.
âI'm Molly.'
âGurl, the name's Chuck.'
Thinking to myself is it true what they say about interns and nurses, I said, âI'm Roy.'
âThis your first day, guys?'
âYeah. I was just thinkin' of joinin' the army instead.'
âI'm new too,' Molly said. âStarted just last month. Scary, eh?'
âNo foolin',' said Chuck.
âHang in there, guys, we'll make it. See ya round the campus, eh?'
Chuck looked at me and I looked at him, and he said, âSure does make you glad to be spendin' time in here makin' it with the gomers, don't it?'
We watched Molly disappear down the corridor. She stopped to say hello to Potts, who was talking to a young Czech patient, a man yellow from liver disease. The Yellow Man flirted with Molly, and then ogled her as she, giggling, wiggled down the corridor. Potts came over to us and picked up the lab results from the morning.
âLazlow's liver functions are getting worse,' he said.
âHe looks mighty yellow,' said Chuck. âLemmee see. Too high. If I was you, Potts, I'd give him some roids.'
âRoids?'
âSteroids, man, steroids. Whose patient is he, anyhow?'
âHe's mine. He's too poor to afford a Private doctor.'
âWell, I'd give him the roids. Never know if he don't have fulminant necrotic hepatitis. If'n he does, unless you hit him with the roids now, he's gonna die.'
âYeah,' said Potts, âbut the tests aren't that high, and steroids have a lot of side effects. I'd just as soon wait a day.'
âSuit yourself. Looks awful yellow, though, don't he?'
Thinking about what the Fat Man said about the young dying, I got up to do some work. When I returned to the nursing station I saw two LOLs in NAD peering through their thick cataract-defying glasses at the blackboard on which were written the names of the new interns on the ward. They mentioned my name and I asked them if they were looking for me. Tiny, a foot below me, huddled together, they peered up at me. âOh, yes,' said one.
âOh, aren't you the tall young doctor.'
âHandsome and tall,' said the other. âYes, we want to hear the news about our brother Itzak.'
âItzak Rokitansky. The professor. Brilliant, he was.'
âHow is he, Dr. Basch?'
I felt trapped, not knowing what to say. Fighting the impulse to say PURRTY GUD, I said, âWell . . . I've only been here a day. It's too early to tell. We'll wait and see.'
âIt's his brain,' said one. âHis marvelous brain. We're glad you'll be taking care of him, and we'll look for you tomorrow. We visit every day.'
âWe spend much of our time now visiting the ones who are ill. Good-bye Dr. Basch. Thank you so much.
I left them, and noticed them pointing at me to each other, pleased that I would be their brother's doctor. I was moved. I was a doctor. For the first time that day, I felt excited, proud. They believed in me, in my art. I would take care of their brother, and them. Take care of the whole world, why not? I marched down the hallway with pride. I fingered the chrome of my stethoscope with a certain expertise. Like I knew what I was doing. Far-out.