I
ran my hand along his face. The beard had started to fill in slightly. I would
need to tend to that shortly, after I had bathed him. It had been so long
since I had taken care of anyone near my own age. It was a little disconcerting.
He was so silent. They were drugging him, keeping him unconscious so he could
heal. It was hard to watch him this way, but it would probably be harder to
be near him when he awoke.
I never knew what to expect when Sister Grenata would call me for private
duty. Sometimes it was old men who had suffered strokes, sometimes wealthy
women who had given birth and wanted a little more attention. I had once taken
care of a young boy who suffered from a terrible genetic disease. I had watched
his mother, seven months pregnant, as she grieved for the child dying in the
bed as well as the one in her womb facing the same prognosis.
This call had presented me with Detective Tim Bayliss. He was thirty-seven
years old, shot in the line of duty. The bullet rest against his spine. The
doctors didn't know if and when they might be able to remove it. If it remained
he would surely be paralyzed, if it was removed he could die in the surgery.
Until he was well enough to leave St. Gracia's, I would take care of him.
I carefully slipped a towel underneath him, barely moving him. The bullet
was unstable, so I didn't want to risk injuring him further. I moved my cloth
slowly back and forth over his body. The blood and sweat were still present
from the shooting the night before. I did my best to clean him up as much
as possible. I moved the cloth up his chest, along his rib cage.
Finishing, I tied his gown back up and turned my attention to his whiskers.
Pulling the razor from the table I moved it back and forth across the leather
strap, sharpening the blade so it wouldn't pull at the fuzz of hair now apparent
across his face. I lathered his face with the shaving cream and then pulled
the razor across it, leaving the skin soft and bare.
I rinsed the cloth in the warm water again and wiped the last of the cream
from his face. He looked like an angel, relaxed in his unconscious slumber.
Whatever would he think when he awoke?
I
work the relief shift, from 3 pm to eleven at night. I try to sleep when I
get home, but often I'm too keyed up. I slipped the white nurses shoes from
my feet as I closed the door to my apartment. Big Kitty, my calico, appeared
from the kitchen and followed me as I walked into the living room and dropped
down on the sofa. What must have been going through Detective Bayliss' head
as he lay on the ground, helpless, cut down by the bullet from an assassin's
gun?
I didn't know the actual particulars of his case, only what I had heard on
the news about a arrest gone wrong, but in my mind anyone who would hurt such
a beautiful man had to be an assassin.
My eyes glazed as I tried to follow the plot of the "Law & Order" playing
on A&E, but I had joined it ten minutes in and the plot had already spun out
of control. Sliding off the couch, I headed for my bedroom to try and wipe
Tim Bayliss from my mind.
I
moved his legs up and down as he watched under hooded eyes. The physical therapist
came in the morning, but it was important that we keep him supple until they
could start therapy. Until the bullet's location stabilized, though, he was
confined to his bed. The orderly would assist me in moving him so he wouldn't
get pressure sores, but other than simple range of motion, there wasn't much
else we could do for him.
I slipped my hand under the sheet, trying to take care of his bodily needs
without too much fuss. I stopped when I felt his hand on my wrist.
"Why do you do that?" he intoned, his voice thick with disuse.
"What do you mean?" I replied, slipping my hand away, the tubing and KY jelly
still in it.
"I know what you're doing under that sheet, why don't you just make it easier
on both of us."
I blushed. I had gone into private nursing because I wasn't very good with
the patients. I was much more likely to have someone in a coma then to have
someone like this detective questioning me.
"I just thought it would be easier...for both of us," I stammered.
He pulled the sheet down as far as he could, exposing his hospital gown and
thin, white legs.
"If I'm going to be like this, I want to know what the hell you are doing
to me," he replied, sounding more angry.
I nodded and began again, pulling his gown up, exposing his body. I slipped
the tubing into him, holding it carefully so the urine bag could fill easily.
After a few minutes I removed the tubing and pulled his gown back down.
"Did you want the sheets pulled back up?" I asked. He nodded. Good, maybe
we were done talking for a while.
I disappeared into the bathroom, noting his output on the chart and then disposing
of the contents of the bag. I flushed the toilet, washed my hands and walked
back into the room.
"Will you be okay if I step out for a moment?" I asked.
He nodded. I moved toward the door, stopping only at the sound of his voice.
"Thank you," he said. I nodded, looking back at him quickly and then escaped
to the relative calm of the small kitchen behind the nurses station.
Sister
Grenata called me this morning. There's a man who came for stomach surgery
who had an embolism burst during the procedure. He will need round the clock
care, probably for the next few months. I told her no. I realize that this
is how it happens. I move from patient to patient, never knowing if they recover
or they die. I think it's time for me to do something different, to start
to develop some meaningful relations. I think that it's time for me to start
caring for people.
The End