Read PATIENT CARE (Medical Romance) (Doctor Series) Online
Authors: Bobby Hutchinson
“Mom? Mom, what’s wrong?”
Melissa was alarmed. “You sound terrible.”
She usually had lunch with Betsy on Sunday afternoon, but her mother had called yesterday morning and canceled, claiming that she hadn’t slept well the night before and needed to have a little nap.
Melissa had been relieved that Betsy hadn’t suggested she come by later in the day; she’d had a stack of reports to read by Monday morning. Now she felt a stab of guilt for not at least calling last night and checking on her mother.
“I’m sick, Lissa.” Betsy drew a shuddering breath. “I’ve had this awful pain in my stomach all weekend, and I kept thinking it would go away. But it’s gotten worse instead of better. Now I’m really sick to my stomach. And dizzy. I’m real dizzy.”
“Mom, lie down and stay there. Don’t take anything. I’ll be right over.” Melissa hung up the phone and grabbed her keys and handbag. Her mother prided herself on never being ill, and the odd time she was, she wouldn’t admit to anything more severe than a touch of flu or an annoying little cold, even when she sounded as if she had pneumonia. For Betsy to call and say she was sick could only mean that her mother was desperate.
Even exceeding the speed limit, the trip to the Vancouver suburb of Burnaby took twenty-five frantic minutes. Melissa screeched into the driveway of the tiny bungalow where she’d grown up, abandoned the car and raced to the door, which was locked as usual; Betsy worried about intruders.
Melissa swore under her breath as she unearthed her key, and then wrinkled her nose as she stepped inside. The house was like an oven; she’d tried repeatedly to put air-conditioning in for Betsy, but her stubborn mother would have none of it.
“That’s how people get sick,” Betsy insisted. “Breathing secondhand air.”
Once the woman had an idea in her head, there was no changing it.
“Mom, it’s me,” Melissa called. There was no answer. Filled with apprehension, she hurried through the living room and into Betsy’s small bedroom off the hallway.
Her mother was slumped across the bed, her long, thin frame curled into a tight ball. That she was lying on top of her cream-colored heirloom bedspread was another disturbing indication of extreme distress. Melissa had never seen Betsy so much as sit on the treasured bedcover.
Melissa crouched beside Betsy and put a hand on her forehead. Her mother had a fever.
“Mom, can you talk? Tell me exactly what’s happened, exactly where you hurt.”
Betsy made an effort to sit up, but the pain was obviously too intense and she slumped down again. Her face, normally either wreathed in smiles or screwed into a frown of disapproval, was contorted with pain and pasty white. She was perspiring heavily, which was understandable in the heat, but she was also shivering so hard her teeth were chattering.
“I’m sure it’s nothing,” she gasped. “I’ve been constipated for a while. I took some of those laxatives Gladys brought over. If my bowels would just move, I’m sure I’d feel better.”
Melissa knew that wasn’t the solution. Constipation was a symptom. She’d begun her career as a nurse, working in the ER for some years before going back to school to get her master’s in health administration. Talking in a soothing tone now despite her alarm, she asked questions as she felt her mother’s abdomen and again assessed her temperature.
It was immediately obvious that Betsy needed medical attention—and fast. The problem would be getting her to agree. Along with her dread of intruders, Betsy had what amounted to a paranoid fear of doctors and hospitals.
When Melissa was still a toddler, her mother had lost both her parents and Melissa’s father within a six-month period. Their illnesses, in Betsy’s opinion, had all been misdiagnosed and mistreated by the family physician. He’d put Melissa’s father, Frank, “under the knife” when an ulcer perforated. Frank had never regained consciousness, and Melissa had listened to complaints of professional bungling throughout her growing-up years.
She wondered sometimes if her own attraction to the medical field wasn’t some sort of rebellion on her part.
Betsy hadn’t been to a doctor since she’d broken her wrist nineteen years ago, a long enough time between doctor’s visits, Melissa decided.
“Mom, I’m calling an ambulance. You need to go to Emergency.”
The closest ER was Burnaby General, but Betsy had no family doctor. Melissa had met all the doctors at St. Joe’s, and she wanted someone she knew to care for her mother.
Betsy shook her head.
“Mom, you’ve got something seriously wrong, and there’s no other alternative. You have to be seen by a doctor.”
“No, Lissa,” Betsy moaned. “I won’t go to any hospital. Once they get you in, that’s the end of you.”
Betsy had responded as Melissa had expected, but the lack of willfulness in her tone showed exactly how sick she really was. Melissa didn’t bother arguing. She phoned 911, and within twenty minutes paramedics were gently loading Betsy on a stretcher. She had stopped objecting, which Melissa found almost as terrifying as the sound of her mother whimpering.
At St. Joe’s, Dr. Greg Brulotte was in charge of the evening shift, for which Melissa was grateful; he was highly proficient. Betsy couldn’t be in better hands, but it didn’t quell the fear that made Melissa’s own hands tremble as she filled out the necessary forms.
She paced the waiting room while her mother was being examined, and her heart hammered when Brulotte came hurrying toward her, his slight limp not slowing him down at all.
“Your mother has a bowel obstruction, Melissa,” he said without preamble. “X rays show a sizable mass, which has to be removed. We’re taking her up to surgery immediately.”
Now, if only the technicians could repair the air- conditioning in her office, she might get through this crisis without a coronary.