Home > Anything You Can Do(11)

Anything You Can Do(11)
Author: R.S. Grey

After checking for traffic, I run across the street and stuff my bag and the fruit in my bike’s wicker basket. Fuming, I strap my helmet on and pull my bike off the rack a little more aggressively than intended. The evening sun is beginning to dip low on the horizon, and as I pedal west toward home, I’m nearly blinded. Somehow, this is Lucas’ fault too.

A half-mile in, my heart rate increases, and his words form an echo chamber in my head.

You haven’t changed one bit, Daisy…

The fruit is from Daisy…

I didn’t realize you were a puppet now…

I begin to take my frustration out on the bike, pounding against the pedals with as much force as my legs can muster, all while imagining them to be Lucas’ sensitive parts.

Powered by my rage, I build up an impressive amount of speed as I come upon my final turn onto Magnolia Ave. I lean into the turn to compensate for my momentum, and my worn tires bite into the pavement.

Until they don’t.

I hit an oil slick, a gift to the environment from one of Hamilton’s many old, leaky farm trucks. My back tire fishtails, and my handlebars wobble in a futile effort to right the floundering ship. Time slows down as my bike, now perpendicular to my direction of travel, buckles sideways and loads me up like a circus performer in a cannon. Time speeds up just before my impact with the street.

My brain jumps into action, forcibly volunteering my left arm to take the full brunt of the fall. Valiantly, the limb springs out at the last second as if to tell the road to talk to the hand. Sadly, the road has a lot to say. I hear a sickening crack just above the overall clamor of the crash, and then an abrupt silence settles over the scene.

Chapter Five

“Nice cast,” Lucas says the next morning.

“Don’t talk to me.”

“Did they let you pick the color?”

It’s neon green, my favorite.

“No,” I lie. “It’s all they had.”

“Morning,” Gina says with a smile, doing a poor job of surreptitiously ogling Lucas. He’s wearing a light blue dress shirt that compliments his tan skin, and apparently Gina thinks it looks good on him. I hadn’t noticed.

Lucas and I have been standing in the small kitchen for the last few minutes, waiting for the coffee to finish brewing. I swear it is percolating even slower than usual.

“Oh no! Dr. Bell, what happened?”

She has finally pulled her gaze off Lucas long enough to notice the lime green elephant in the room.

“Bike accident yesterday.” I shrug, holding up my fractured wrist. “The ground came out of nowhere.”

Other than that, I’ve got a few tender ribs and a nice gash across my forehead, which is currently covered by a matching neon green Band-Aid. As soon as I leave the kitchen, I’ll exchange it for a boring beige to throw Lucas off my scent.

Dr. McCormick steps up behind Gina and shakes his head. “Sorry to hear about the accident, Daisy. Your mom called, said you two were in the hospital for a good part of the evening.”

I inwardly groan. Of course my mother thought it was appropriate to contact my boss. In her eyes, I am a 28-year-old toddler.

“It was nothing. Distal radius fracture, quick reset, cast for six weeks.”

He nods solemnly. “Even still, you two will have to see patients together until that comes off, I’m afraid.”

I turn around to check if there is another person in the tiny kitchen, anyone other than Lucas.

“What?!” we exclaim, equally disgusted by the idea.

“Dr. McCormick.” I try to recover quickly. “I assure you, I don’t need his help seeing patients. I’m perfectly capable of continuing on by myself.”

To prove my point, I reach for the patient chart I brought into the kitchen and stuff it beneath my arm. I put my unopened granola bar between my teeth and then reach down for my empty mug with my free hand.

“Voila.”

The granola bar slips out with the word and lands with a splack on top of Dr. McCormick’s brown leather loafers.

He shakes his head and turns, not nearly as amused as he should be.

“Diane is waiting for you two in room four,” Mariah says. “No rush. I just put her in and she’s still getting her robe on.”

Lucas and I look at one another and then book it out of the kitchen in tandem.

“Look, bike safety is not something to ignore,” he says, pointing to my cast. “I think my parents still have Madeleine’s old training wheels in the garage. I’d be happy to install them for you.”

I roll my eyes and let his words deflect off my bullshit force field. When all of this is over, it will be doubly satisfying knowing I out-doctored him with one arm tied behind my back.

“I can’t believe we have to see patients together like we’re first-year interns.”

I elbow him out of the way so I can nab Diane’s chart first. “Oh please. You should be so lucky to go into an exam room with me.”

He nearly smiles and then covers it up with a hard cough. My heart soars and I cover it up with a cough of my own. We are two hacking doctors standing in the hallway, moments away from being locked in padded rooms.

“So how do we want to play this?” he interrupts, changing the subject and reaching down to angle the chart so he can read it as well.

“Let’s alternate taking the lead,” I suggest diplomatically. “I’ll go first.”

“Of course.”

My time in the hospital waiting room the day before gave me a lot of time to consider my three-phase plan. Dr. McCormick went out of his way to lay down the criteria he’s looking for: community engagement and patient satisfaction. The latter will come naturally, over weeks of working in the office and worming my way into our patients’ hearts. The former will take some engineering, but I already have a brilliant idea.

   
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