“You’re kidding me,” Mia said when she saw the finished product.
“That’s pretty cool about Davy Crockett, right?” Bitsy asked. “But what isn’t cool is that Dr. Mia has no costume. So I made her something. What did I tell you Davy Crockett wore?”
“Coonskin cap!” One little boy shouted the answer from his seat on the floor at the front of the group.
Mia smiled at him, one of a handful of nonsurgical patients she knew from her rounds here on the pediatric floor. Most of her time these days was spent in surgery and following up on those patients. Her work toward fulfilling the requirements needed to take her pediatric surgical boards left little time for meeting all the patients on the floor, but a few kids you only had to meet once, and they wormed their ways into your heart. She looked around again for Rory.
“That’s right,” Bitsy was saying. “And this is a balloon skin cap!”
She set it on Mia’s head, where it perched like a bird on a treetop. The children clapped and squealed. Bitsy did a chicken flap and waggled one foot in the air before bowing to her audience.
“I want a boon-skin cap!”
A tiny girl, perhaps four, shuffled forward with the aid of the smallest walker possibly in existence. She managed it deftly for one so little, even though her knees knocked together, her feet turned inward, and the patch over one eye obscured half her vision. She wore a hot-pink tutu over frosting-pink footie pajamas, and a tiara atop her black curls. To her own surprise, Mia’s throat tightened.
“But, Megan, you have a beautiful crown already,” Bitsy said gently.
Megan pulled the little tiara off her head and held it out. “I can twade.”
Mia lost it, and she never lost it. She squatted and pulled the balloon cap off her head then held it out, her eyes hot. “I would love to trade with you,” she said.
Megan beamed. Mia placed the crazy black-and-brown balloon concoction on the child, where it slipped over her hair and settled to her eyebrows.
“Here,” Megan said, pronouncing it “hee-oh.” “I put it on you.”
She reached over the top of her walker and pressed on Mia’s nose to tilt her face downward. She placed the tiara in Mia’s hair and patted her head gently. It might as well have been a coronation by the Archduke of Canterbury. Megan had spina bifida and had come through surgery just four days earlier. No child this happy and tender and tough should have such a poor prognosis and uncertain future.
“You can be Davy Cwockett’s pincess.” Megan smiled, clearly pleased with herself.
“I think you gave me the best costume ever,” Mia replied. “Could I have a hug?”
Megan opened her arms wide and squeezed Mia’s neck with all her might. She smelled of chocolate bars, apple-cinnamon, and a whiff of the strawberry body lotion they used in this department. A delicious little waif.
She let the child go and stood. A young woman with the same black hair as Megan arrived at her side. It could only be Megan’s mom. She bent and whispered something in her daughter’s ear. The child nodded enthusiastically. “Thank you, Doc-toh Mia.”
“You’re welcome. And thank you.”
The young mother’s eyes met Mia’s, gratitude shining in their depths. “Thanks from me, too. This is a wonderful party. So much effort by the whole staff.”
“I wish I’d had more to do with it.”
“You just did a great deal.”
Megan had already started on her way back to the audience. Mia watched her slow progress, forgetting about the crowd until a powerful shove against her upper arm nearly knocked her off her feet. She turned to Bitsy and saw Brooke—grinning through the white makeup.
“What the heck? Clown attack. Go away you maniac.”
A few kids in the front row twittered. Bitsy honked at her, but it was Brooke who leaned close to her ear. “That was awesome, Crockett,” she whispered. “It’s the kind of thing they need to see you do more of around here.”
“They” referred to the medical staff. It was true she didn’t have the most warm-hearted reputation—but that was by design. She grabbed Bitsy’s ugly horn.
“They can kiss my—” Honk. Honk.
All the kids heard and saw was Davy Cwockett’s Pincess stealing a clown’s horn. Bitsy capitalized, placing her hands on her knees and exaggerating an enormous laugh.
“Hey! I think I have a new apprentice clown. What do you all say?”
Bitsy pulled off her red nose and popped it on Mia’s. The kids screeched their approval.
“I’m going to murder you.” Mia’s tone belied her pleasant smile.
“Our newest clown needs a name. Any ideas?”
Princess! Clowny! Clown Doctor! Sillypants! Stefo-scope!
Names flew from the young mouths like hailstones, pelting Mia with ridiculousness.
“Stethoscope the Clown, I like it.” Bitsy laughed. “How about Mercy?”
“Princess Goodheart.” That came quietly from Megan’s mother, standing against the side wall, certainty in her demeanor.
“Oh, don’t you dare.” Mia practically hissed the words at her friend the clown.
“Perfect!” Bitsy called, her falsetto ringing through the room. “Now, how about we get Princess Goodheart to help with a magic trick?”
Mia’s sentimentality of moments before dissipated fully. This was why she couldn’t afford such soppy silliness, even over children. If she was going to turn to syrup at the first sign of a child with a walker and a patched eye, perhaps pediatrics wasn’t the place for her.
On the other hand, Megan represented the very reason Mia wanted to move from general to pediatric surgery. She had skill—a special gift according to teachers and some colleagues—and she could use it to help patients like Megan. They needed her.
“Pick a card, Princess Goodheart.” Bitsy nudged her arm.
Mia sighed. She’d have thought a party featuring simple games, fine motor skill-building, and prizes would have been more worthwhile. The mindlessness of magicians and the potential for scaring children with clowns seemed riskier. Indeed there were a few uncomplicated, arcade-type games at little stations around the room, but the magic and clown aficionados had prevailed. Mia grunted and picked a six of clubs.
“Don’t show me,” said Bitsy.
“I wouldn’t dream of it.”
“Now, put the card back in the deck. Who wants to wave their hand over the deck and say the magic words?” Bitsy asked.
“Oh, God, help! Oh, help, help please. Something’s happening to him!”
Bitsy dropped the card deck. In the back of the room, next to a table full of food and treats, a woman stood over the crumpled body of a boy, twitching and flailing his arms. Mia heard his gasps for breath, ripped the ridiculous nose off her face, and pressed into the crowd of kids.
“Keep them all back,” she ordered Brooke, right beside her and already shushing children in a calm Bitsy voice.
The fact that she continued acting like a clown in the face of an emergency made Mia angry, but there was no time now to call her out for unprofessionalism. In the minute it took Mia to reach the child on the floor, five nurses had surrounded him, and the woman who’d called for help stood by, her face ashen.
“Are you the boy’s mother?” Mia asked.
“No. I was just standing here when he started choking.”
“Out of the way, please.” Mia shouldered her way between two nurses, spreading her arms to clear space. They’d turned the child on his side. “Is he actually choking?”
“He’s not. It looks like he’s reacting to something he ate,” a male nurse replied.
She knelt, rolled the child to his back, and froze. “Rory?”
“A patient of yours?” the nurse asked.
“The son of a friend.” Mia hadn’t seen him arrive. She forced back her shock and set a mental wall around her sudden emotions. “Is there anything on his chart?”
She’d known Rory Beltane and his mother for three years and didn’t remember ever
hearing about an allergy this life-threatening.
“I don’t believe there were any allergies listed,” the nurse said. “We’re checking his information now. He’s a foster kid.”
“Yes, I know,” she replied with defensive sharpness. “His mother is incapacitated and temporarily can’t care for him. Is the foster mother here?”
“No. At work.” The nurse said. “Poor kid. He was just starting to feel better after having his appendix out. This isn’t fair.”
She had no time to tell him exactly how unfair Rory Beltane’s life had been recently. “I need a blood pressure cuff stat. Get him on IV epinephrine, methylpred and Benadryl, plus IV fluids wide open.”
“Right away, Doctor.” Nurses scattered.
The male nurse calmly read from a chart, and Mia’s temper flared.
“Excuse me, nurse, are you getting me that cuff?”
“It’s on the way,” he said and smiled. “Just checking his chart for you. No notations about allergies. I’ll go get the gurney.”
Mia blew out her breath. She couldn’t fault him for being cool under pressure. Another nurse, this one an older woman with a tone as curt as Mia’s, knelt on Rory’s far side holding his wrist. “Heart rate is one-forty.”
Mia held her stethoscope to the boy’s chest. His lips looked slightly swollen. His breathing labored from his tiny chest.
“Here, Dr. Crockett. They’re bringing a gurney and the electronic monitor, but this was at the nurse’s station if you’d like to start with it.”
Mia grabbed the pediatric-sized cuff, its bulb pump reminding her of Brooke’s obnoxious horn. With efficient speed, she wrapped the gray cuff around Rory’s arm, placed her stethoscope beneath it, and took the reading.
She’d always been struck by what a stunning child he was. His mother was black and his father white, and his skin was the perfect blend, like the color of a beautiful sand beach after a rain. A thick shock of dark curly hair adorned his head, and when they were open, his eyes were a laughing, precocious liquid brown.
“Seventy-five over fifty. Don’t like that,” she said.
The male nurse appeared with a gurney bed. “I can lift him if you’re ready. We have the IV catheter and epinephrine ready.”
“Go,” Mia ordered.
Moments later Rory had been placed gently on the gurney, and three nurses, like choreographed dancers, had the IV in place, all the meds Mia had ordered running, and were rolling him to his private room.
“We’ve called Dr. Wilson, the pediatric hospitalist on duty this week who’s seen Rory a couple of times. He’ll be here in a few minutes,” said the male nurse, who’d just begun to be her favorite.
She frowned. “It wasn’t necessary to bring him in yet. I think we have this well in hand. We need fewer bodies, not more.”
“I’ll let him know.”
The epinephrine began to work slowly but surely, and most of the staff, at Mia’s instruction, returned to the party to help the remaining kids. The older nurse and the male nurse remained.
Ten minutes after he’d first passed out, Rory opened his eyes, gasping as the adrenaline coursed through him and staring wild-eyed as if he didn’t believe air was reaching his lungs.
“Slow breaths, Rory.” Mia placed her hand on his. “Don’t be afraid. You have plenty of air now, I promise. Lots of medicine is helping it get better and better. Breathe out, nice and slow. I’m going to listen to your heart again, okay?”
Mia listened and found his heart rate slowing. A new automatic blood pressure cuff buzzed, and Rory winced as the cuff squeezed. Tears beaded in his eyes. Mia stared at the monitor, while the nurse calmed the boy again.
“That’s a little better,” Mia said. “But, I think we need to keep you away from the party for a while. That was scary, huh?”
“Dr. Mia?” He finally recognized her.
“Hi,” she said. “This is a surprise, isn’t it?”
“You saved me,” he whispered in a thick, hoarse rasp. “Nobody ever saves me.”
For the first time Mia truly looked at the two nurses who stood with her. Their eyes reflected the stunned surprise she felt.
“Of course I saved you,” she said. “Anybody would save you, Rory. You probably haven’t needed saving very often, that’s all.”
“Once. I ate some peanut butter when my mom wasn’t at home. I couldn’t breathe, but Mrs. Anderson next door didn’t believe me.” His voice strengthened as he spoke. “I can’t eat peanut butter.”
“What did you eat today? Do you remember? Right before you couldn’t breathe?”
He shook his head vehemently. “A cupcake. A chocolate one. I can eat chocolate.”
“Anything else?”
“I had one little Three Musketeer. Bitsy gave it to me. She said the nurses said it was okay to have one because my stomach feels better.”
Bitsy again. Rory looked solely at Mia and avoided the nurses’ eyes, as if he feared they’d contradict his story.
“And you don’t remember any other food?” Mia asked.
“I didn’t eat nothing else. I swear.”
“It’s all right. It really is. All I care about is finding what made you sick. Look, I’m going to go out and talk to some more nurses—”
“No! Stay here.” He stretched out his arm, his fingers spread beseechingly.
“All right.” She let him grab her hand and looked at him quizzically. “But you’re fine now.”
“No.”
He was so certain of his answer. Mia couldn’t bear to ignore his wishes, although it made no logical sense. At that moment a white-coated man with a Lincoln-esque figure appeared in the doorway.
“My, my, what’s going on here? Is that you Rory?”
Rory clung to Mia’s hand and didn’t answer. Mia looked over the newcomer, not recognizing him, although his badge identified him as Frederick Wilson, MD.
His eyes brushed over Mia, and he dismissed her with a quick “Good afternoon.” No questions, no request for an update from her, the medical expert already on the case. She bristled but stayed quietly beside Rory, squeezing his hand.
“How’s our man?” Dr. Wilson asked. “You doing okay, Champ?” He oozed the schmoozy bedside manner she found obsequious, and the child who’d been talkative up to now merely stared at the ceiling.
Dr. Wilson chuckled. “That’s our Rory. Not great talk show material, but he plays a mean game of chess from what I hear. A silent, brilliant kind of man. I’m Fred Wilson.” He held out a hand. “You must be one of the techs or NAs?”
She stared at him in disbelief. A nursing assistant? Who was this idiot? She looked down and remembered her badge was in her pocket. She fished it out and shoved it at him. “I’m Dr. Amelia Crockett, and I’ve been handling Rory’s case since the incident about fifteen minutes ago.”
“Crockett. Crockett.” He stared off as if accessing information in space somewhere. “The young general surgeon who’s working now toward a second certification in pediatric surgery. Sorry, I’ve been here two weeks and have tried to brush up on all the staff resumes. I’m the new chief of staff here in peds. Up from Johns Hopkins.”
She had heard his name and that he was a mover and shaker.
“Dr. Wilson,” she acknowledged.
“So, since you’re a surgeon and not familiar with Rory’s whole case, maybe I’ll trouble you to get me up to speed on the anaphylaxis, and then I’ll take over so you can get back to what I’m sure is a busy schedule.” Dr. Wilson crossed his arms and smiled.
She glared at him again. He may as well have called her just a surgeon. And to presume she hadn’t familiarized herself with Rory’s case before prescribing any course of action . . .
“I’m sorry, Dr. Wilson,” she said. “But with all due respect, I happen to know this child, and I’m also well aware of the details of his case. I, too, can read a patient history. I believe I can follow up on this episode and make the report in his chart for you, his regular pediatrician, and the other do
cs on staff who will treat him.”
“It really isn’t necessary,” he replied, and his smile left his eyes.
Unprofessional as it was, she disliked him on the spot, as if she’d met him somewhere else and hadn’t liked him then either.
“I was here to help with the Halloween party,” she said. “My afternoon is free and clear.”
“That explains much. So that isn’t your normal, everyday head ornamentation?”
For a moment she met his gaze, perplexed. Oh, crap. Her hand flew to her head, and in mortification she pulled off the tiara still stuck there with its little side combs.
“I didn’t mean you needed to take it off. It was fetching,” Dr. Wilson said. He winked with a condescending kind of flirtatiousness—as if he were testing her.
She flicked an unobtrusive glance at his left hand. No band, but a bulky gold ring with a sizeable onyx set in the middle. She got the impression he was old school all the way, a little annoyed with female practitioners, and extremely cocky about his own abilities.
“Rory is improving rapidly since the administration of Benadryl and epinephrine. We are uncertain of the allergen. From what he’s told us he has a suspected sensitivity to peanut butter, but as far as we know he hasn’t eaten any nuts.”
Dr. Wilson nodded, patting Rory periodically on the shoulder. Rory continued his silence.
“Rory, do you mind if I do a little exam on your tummy?” Dr. Wilson asked.
“Dr. Mia already did it.” He turned his head just enough to look at her.
Again he smiled, ignoring Mia. “I’m sure she did, but I’m a different kind of doctor, and I’d like to help her make sure you’re okay. Maybe if everyone left the room except you and me and Miss Arlene, it won’t be so embarrassing if I check you out? Dr. Crockett and Darren can go and make sure there’s nothing out at the party that will hurt you again.”
Arlene and Darren, she noted absently. She hadn’t taken the time to look at their nametags.
The Bride Wore Starlight Page 32