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Authors: Samuel Shem

BOOK: House of God
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Gradually, thinking of what the Fat Man had taught me, I began to feel more confident, more wide-awake, nervous, but excited. I liked this man. He was asking me to take care of him, and I would do my best. I went to work, and when the X ray showed fluid in the chest cavity, and I knew I'd better tap it to see what it was, I decided I'd page the Fat Man. Just as he arrived, I put together the findings and realized that the most likely diagnosis was malignancy. I got a sick feeling in my gut. The Fat Man, a jolly green blimp in his surgical pajamas, floated in, and with a few words with Dr. Sanders established a marvelous rapport. A warmth filled the room, a trust, a plea to help, a promise to try. It was what medicine might be. I tapped the chest. Since I'd practiced on Anna O., it was easy. The Fat Man was right: with the gomers you risked and learned, so when you had to perform, you did. And I realized that the reason the House Slurpers tolerated the Fat Man's bizarre ways was that he was a terrific doc. The mirror image of Putzel. I finished the tap, and Dr. Sanders, breathing more easily, said, ‘You be sure to tell me what the cytology of that fluid is, all right? No matter what it shows.'
‘Nothing will be definite for a few days,' I said.
‘Well, you tell me in a few days. If it's malignant, I've got to make some plans. I've got a brother in West Virginia; our father left us some land. I've been putting off a fishing trip with him much too long.'
Outside the room, chills running up and down my spine as I thought of what might be in the test tubes of fluid in my pocket, I listened to the Fat Man ask, ‘Did you see his face?'
‘What about it?'
‘Remember it. It's the face of a dying man. Good night.'
‘Hey, wait. I figured it out—the reason they let you screw around the way you do is that you're good.'
‘Good? Nah, not just good. Very good. Even great. Night-night.'
I wheeled Dr. Sanders back up to the ward and went back to bed just as the dawn was exploding the hot nasty night. The frenetic surgeons were just beginning their morning rounds, getting ready for a day of doing nice civic things like sewing people's hands back on people's arms, and the first shifts of Housekeeping were boogeying along in the House bowels. I pulled on my socks to go to the Fat Man's cardflip, and realized that I felt like socks: sweaty, stale, smelly, stiff, worn a day longer than I should have been. From the cardflip on, things began to melt, meld and blur, and by lunchtime I was so woozy that Chuck and Potts had to lead me through the cafeteria line to the table and the only thing I'd put on my tray was a big glass of iced coffee. I was so ataxic that when I tried to sit I banged my shin on the table leg, stumbled, and spilled the iced coffee all over my whites. It felt cool dripping through my crotch. It felt far off, somewhere else. That afternoon the Leggo was holding Chief's Rounds with our team. He came down the hallway wearing his usual butcher-length white coat with that long stethoscope wending its way across his chest and down and tucked into his pants, and he was whistling ‘Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer troooo.' As he examined the patient, I had an urge to shove Levy into the Leggo so that both would tumble into bed with the gomer who was being saved at all costs, and I fantasized that ‘Leggo' was somehow cryptographic for ‘Let my gomers go,' and I pictured the Leggo leading the gomers out of the peaceful land of death into the bondage of prolonged pitiful suffering life, legging it through the Sinai wolfing down the unleavened bread and singing ‘Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer trooo.'
Chaos. The blur blurred. I didn't think I would make it through the day. The nurse came up to me and said that my only Italian patient, nicknamed Boom Boom, who had no cardiac disease, was having chest pain. I walked into the room, where the family of eight were chattering away in Italian. I took an EKG, which was normal, and then, a showman with an audience of eight, decided to use the Fat Man's reverse stethoscope technique. I plugged Boom Boom in, and yelled into the megaphone: ‘Cochlea come in! Cochlea come in! Do you read me, cochlea . . .' Boom Boom opened her eyes, shrieked, jumped, put her fist to her chest in the classic sign of cardiac pain, stopped breathing, and turned blue. I realized that I and eight Italians were witnessing a cardiac arrest. I thumped Boom Boom on the chest, which produced another shriek, signifying life. Trying to assure the family that this whole thing had been routine, I ushered them out and called an arrest code. The first to arrive was Housekeeping, for some reason carrying a bunch of lilies; next came a Pakistani anesthesiologist. With the ring of the Italian delegation in my ears, I felt like I was at the United Nations. Others arrived, but Boom Boom was now doing OK. Fats looked over the new EKG and said, ‘Roy, this is the greatest day of this woman's life, ‘cause she's finally had a bona fide heart attack.'
I tried to persuade the intensive-care resident to take her off my service, but taking one look and saying, ‘Are you for real?' he refused the TURF. Sheepishly, trying to avoid the family, I slunk down the hallway. The Fat Man pointed out a valuable House LAW, NUMBER EIGHT: THEY CAN ALWAYS HURT YOU MORE. I finished my work for the day, and, woozy, paged Potts, to sign out to him for the night. I asked him how it was going.
‘Bad. Ina's on some kind of rampage, stealing shoes and pissing in them. I never should have given her the Valium.'
‘You gave her Valium?'
‘Yeah. To try to control her violence. Worked with the Runt, so I thought I'd try it on her. Made her worse.'
Walking to the elevator with the Fat Man, I said, ‘You know, I think these gomers are trying to hurt me.'
‘Of course they are. They try to hurt everyone.'
‘What difference does that make? I never did anything to hurt them, and they're trying to hurt me.'
‘Exactly, that's modern medicine.'
‘You're crazy.'
‘You have to be crazy to do this.'
‘But if this is all there is, I can't take it. No way.'
‘Of course you can, Roy. Trash your illusions, and the world will beat a pathway to your door.'
And he was gone. I waited for Berry to pick me up outside the House. When she saw me, her face twisted in disgust.
‘Roy! You're green! Phew! Stinky! Green and stinky! What happened?'
‘They got me.'
‘Got you?'
‘Yeah. They killed me.'
‘Who did?'
‘The gomers. But the Fat Man just told me that they hurt everybody and that's modern medicine so I don't know what to think anymore. He said to trash my illusions and the world would beat a pathway to my door.'
‘That sounds bizarre.'
‘That's what I said too, but now I'm not so sure.'
‘I could make you feel better,' said Berry.
‘Just tuck me in.'
‘What?'
‘Just put me in my bed and tuck me in.'
‘But today's your birthday. We're going out to dinner, remember?'
‘I forgot.'
‘Your own birthday and you forgot?'
‘Yup. I'm green and stinky, and just tuck me in.'
She tucked me in, and green and smelly as I was said she loved me all the same and I said I loved her too but it was a lie because they had destroyed something in me and it was some lush thing that had to do with love and I was asleep before she closed the door.
The phone went off, and out of it came two-part harmony: ‘Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Roy-oiy, happy birthday to you.' My birthday, forgotten, then remembered, then forgotten again. My parents. My father said, ‘I hope that you're not too tired and it must be great to have patients of your very own at last,' and I knew he thought modern medicine was the greatest invention since the high-speed dental drill, and as I hung up I thought of Dr. Sanders, who would die, and of the gomers, who would not, and I tried to figure out what was illusion and what was not. I had expected, just like in the
How I Saved the World Without Dirtying My Whites
book, to have been rushing in and saving people at the last moments, and here I had been observing a wrecked Southerner being socked in the puss by a gomere wearing a ram-horned football helmet, all the time being told by a fat wizard who was a wonderful doc and also something phantasmagorical like either a madman or a genius that doing nothing except BUFFING and TURFING was the essence of the delivery of medical care. If there had been the feeling of power in the empty corridor at night and in the crowded elevator during the day, there had also been the awesome powerlessness in the face of the gomers and the helpless incurable young. Sure there had been the clean whites, and the clean white of Putzel's Continental, but the clean whites had gotten spewed with vomit and blood and piss and shit, and the dirty sheets had bred bugs that went right for the finger and the eye, and Putzel was a jerk. In months, Dr. Sanders would be dead. If I knew that I were to die in months, would I spend my time like this? Nope. My mortal healthy body, my ridiculous diseased life. Waiting for the hard screaming line-drive ball, for the aneurysm straining in my brain stem to pop and squirt blood all over my cortex, draining it dry. And now there was no way out. I'd become a tern in the stinky tern in the green house in the House of God.
6
At the end of three weeks, the Fat Man was TURFED out of the House of God to do a rotation at one of the neighboring community hospitals, what he had called one of ‘The Mt. St. Elsewheres.' Although he would still be the resident on call with me every third night, in his fat wake came the new ward resident, the woman named Jo, whose pop had just leaped to his death off a bridge. Like so many of us in medicine, Jo was a victim of success. Growing up short and wiry, plain and tough, in adolescence Jo had ignored her mother's invitations to come out as a deb and had concentrated instead on biology, dissecting rather than attending balls. She first became a victim of success when she successfully annihilated her twin brother by getting into Radcliffe while he went off to some beer-swilling football factory in the Midwest, a trombonist in the marching band. Her academic performance continued to accelerate through college, rocketing her into BMS at a barely pubescent age, her meteoric rise halted only slightly by her mother's all-American involutional psychotic break, which had had the effect of reducing her pop to a quivering jellylike mass. The disintegration of her family had intensified her medical achievement, as if by learning how to do a stellar rectal exam she could detect her family's psychological cancer. And so Jo had come to the House of God, and had become its most ruthless and competitive resident.
From the first day that Jo stood before us, feet apart and hands on hips like the captain of a ship and said, ‘Welcome aboard,' it was clear that she was so different from the Fat Man that she would be a threat to all he'd taught us. A short, trim woman with clipped black hair, a jutting jaw, and dark circles under her eyes, she wore a white skirt and a white jacket, and in a special holster fastened to her belt was a two-inch-thick black ring notebook filled with her own transcription of the three-thousand-page
Principles of Internal Medicine
. If it wasn't in her head, it was on her hip. She spoke strangely, in a monotone devoid of feeling. If it wasn't fact, she didn't handle it. She recognized no humor. ‘Sorry I couldn't be here when I was scheduled to,' she said to Chuck and Potts and me and the BMSs that first day, ‘but I had personal reasons for being away.'
‘Yes, we heard,' said Potts. ‘How are things now?'
‘They're fine. These things do happen. I took it in stride. I'm glad to be back at work to get my mind off it. I know you had the Fat Man for the first three weeks, and I want you to know that I do things differently. Do things my way and we'll get along swell. There's nothing sloppy about the way I run a ward. No loose ends. OK, gang, let's go make rounds. Get the chart rack, eh?'
Delighted, Levy the Lost leaped up to get the chart rack.
‘With Fats,' I said, ‘we sat here for rounds. It was relaxing and efficient—'
‘And sloppy. I see every patient every day. There's no excuse for not seeing every patient every day. You'll soon find out that the more you do in medicine, the better care you give. I do as much as possible. It takes a little longer, but it's worth it. Oh, by the way, that means that rounds will start earlier—six-thirty. Got it? Swell. I run a tight ship. No slop. My career interest is cardiology. I've got an NIH Fellowship next year. We'll be listening to a lot of hearts. But listen: if there are any complaints, I want to hear 'em. Out in the open, got it? OK, gang, let's cast off.'
There was no way that Chuck or I would show up for rounds an hour earlier than we had been showing up for rounds. We followed Jo as she marched out of the room with that fanaticism known only to an overachiever, one who lives with the eternal fear that some lurking underachiever will, in a flash of brilliance, achieve more. As we wheeled the chart rack into and out of the room of every one of the forty-five patients on the ward, with Jo examining each one and then shooting off a lecture from the transcription holstered on her hip, telling each of the terns what he had forgotten to do, I felt a growing apprehension. How could we survive her? She went against everything Fats had taught. She would work us into the ground.
We came to the room containing Anna O. Looking through the chart, Jo went in and examined Anna, despite the Wing of Zock jackhammers, focusing on Anna's heart. As Jo listened and poked and prodded, Anna grew more and more resentful and cried out:
ROODLE ROODLE ROOOOO-DLE!
After she'd finished, Jo asked me what the most important part of Anna's care was.
Thinking of the Fat Man's LAWS, I said, ‘Placement.'

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