Page 173 - FATE & DESTINY
P. 173

FATE & DESTINY

               After the X-ray, we showed him the report. He examined it on the screen box. “Um, looks like
            intestinal obstruction.”
               “What?” I blurted. “Are you sure?”
               “Intestines are all knotted.”
               “Intestines knotted? It has to be a mistake, doctor.”
               He squinted at the report again. “Yes, all knotted.”
               My heart thudded. “Now what?”
               “A surgeon would come to see it.”
               “Doctor John?”
               He shook his head. “The other surgeon.”
               Try as I might, I couldn’t control the sudden burst of emotion. I thought everything was over. Our
            hopes and dreams, hard works, and doctors’ time. And hefty expenditure the government has incurred.
            Above all, it overwhelmed me with the terror of losing the baby. I sat and stroked his hair, sobbing.
               Half an hour later, a young surgeon in a purple gown shuffled in. “Where is the baby?” he asked,
            looking around the room.
               “Here, doctor,” I said as my heart pounded in my chest.
               “What happened?”
               “Diarrhea, doctor. That on-duty doctor said it was an intestinal obstruction.”
               He felt the baby’s abdomen and said, “Pooed?”
               “Yes, doctor, but all watery.”
               “It’s not an intestinal obstruction.” He called the on-duty doctor. “Administer saline to the baby.” He
            turned to me. “You can take the baby home after it is done. Feed him enough ORS.”
               I heaved a sigh of relief. “Thank you, doctor.” I frowned at the on-duty doctor over my shoulder and
            muttered, “Drat! Why did that sissy doctor lie to me? My heart almost seized beating!”
               Two months later, the other on-duty doctor in the emergency ward X-rayed Rinchen. “That’s intestinal
            obstruction,” he said.
               “No, it’s diarrhea,” I said. “His abdomen is soft, and he poos.”
               “Doctor John would tell you.” He phoned Doctor John and said, “He told me to admit the baby. He’ll
            come tomorrow.”
               We carried the baby to the pediatric ward on the third floor. There were two nurses at the table beside
            the door. One was busy at the computer.
               “Excuse me, nurse?” I said.
               The other nurse glanced at me. “Yes?”
               I handed her the form and said, “ER doctor has sent us.”
               She read it. “Please wait. I will arrange the bed.”
               Half an hour passed. She didn’t return. I shuffled in and said, “Is the bed ready, nurse?”
               “You can bring the baby.”
               Early the next day, Dr. John preened at the X-ray report and said, “It’s intestinal obstruction. We may
            have to operate on him. But let’s observe him for a few days.”
               I held my chest. “Oh, hell, no!”
               After three days, Dr. John said, “Did he fart?”
               “Not until now,” I said. “Why, doctor?”
               “Babies don’t fart with intestinal obstruction.”
               I stammered on hearing that. “Oh, really? I never heard of that.”
               “Let’s wait for a few more days,” he said, checking the baby’s heartbeats with a stethoscope. “I will see
            what I can do.”


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