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本帖最后由 洋八路 于 2014-5-16 10:03 编辑
Chapter 39 1/3
‘Give me your Medical Record Book,’ the doctor said, as he sat down in front of her.
He gave it to her.
She inspected the book, then opening an amiable smile, ‘So you are an English teacher.’
‘Yes.’
‘Are you new?’ she asked. ‘I never saw you before.’
There was an obvious fault in the logic of her question, but he answered her just the same, ‘Yes.’
‘Just come here?’
‘No, nearly one year.’
‘Oh,’ she said, as if she had to suspect it. ‘Okay, now, is it about your hand?’
‘Yes, I cut myself.’
‘Put the hand onto the table,’ she ordered. ‘Let me look.’
She took his hand, slanting her head, to the left and to the right, like a bird’s head in making up its mind where to peck.
‘The wound is very long,’ she remarked, after a consideration. ‘How did you do it?’
He was about to tell her the story, then withdrawing, he said, ‘I cut it when cooking.’
‘Cooking?’ she frowned, ‘you mean when you were cutting the meat?’
‘Yeah…’
‘Yeah?’ she eyed him in disbelief. Then, without more response from him, she resumed her professional attitude. ‘I need to clean it first, to see clear the cut, before deciding what to do.’
She rose to her feet and went to a basin, signalling him to come after her. ‘Come here, and sit on the stool.’
He walked over and sat on the stool.
The doctor held his hand and, using a cotton swab which she had dipped wet in a bottle of liquid, dabbed about the place. For the moment, her caring attention was as tense as that of his grandma’s.
At first, it was only tickling, then as it neared the real gash, he felt the sharp and tingling pain. However, he maintained his strained position, refraining in great effort his hand from trembling, or instinctively withdrawing from her nerve-inflicting brushing.
Entirely absorbed in her task, she didn’t seem to be aware of his enormous pain and distress. However, the way she worked so carefully and gently on his hand awed him greatly. To an extent, she was not unlike treating her own hand, or a baby’s. He face was slightly long, her features were soft and harmonious. She wore a pair of elegant spectacles and was clothed by the doctor’s white gown which made her dark, curly hair tendrils look even darker. Admittedly, she a good looking woman, though the appeal was not in a fresh, vivacious way like what she must have been ten years younger.
The taut minutes of her treatment were thus passing, and the quiet warmth he was able to draw from her charm and care was such a nice distractive comfort.
Finally, it was finished, and she said, ‘I will have to do a few stitches; otherwise, it will leave you an ugly scar.’
‘What?’ he exclaimed, ‘stitches? Are you serious?’ The most he had anticipated was a cleaning and a gauze wrapping.
‘Yes, it is serious, can’t you see it yourself? It even hurt the vein,’ she said sternly. ‘Without stitches, the wound will take much longer to heal, and worse, it may catch further infection.’
In her undisputed voice of doctoring, he expressed no more protest but a nervous inquiry. ‘Then how many stitches? How would you do it? Anaesthetic?’
She was smiling, half gloating over his piteous response, ‘Are you afraid? Haven’t you done with stitches before?’
‘No.’
‘Then you are not doing as much sporting as others.’
‘Well, not me.’
‘Which university did you graduate from?’
‘Shangwai.’
‘Shangwai?’ she was confused.
‘Shanghai International Studies University.’
‘Oh, that must be a good one.’
Then she asked him to enter a separate section, where he saw many little tools, such as scissors and gauzes and bottles, on the table.
She pointed at a stool, ‘Sit down.’
He sat down, and she went on with her words, ‘Now, for this cut, I would usually give it six stitches, but if you fear pain, I will do just four.’
‘Pain?’ he raised his eyes, ‘can’t you use anesthesia?’
‘Anesthesia? No, we don’t do that with such minor operation,’ she answered, without any room for bargaining.
Upon this, as if he had to be brave in front of her, he spoke out his courage, ‘Fine then, six stitches.’
However, no sooner had he said it than he regretted for his quick answer, and wanted to change his mind, but no sooner had he wanted to change his mind than he changed his mind again, and said no more. For the moment, he was like a goat being challenged and threatened. He held his face grim and miserable, watching nervously her preparing her tools.
At last, she was ready. She threw him a long steady gaze, plus a little wicked smile as if she was to enjoy something. ‘Okay, now, are you ready?’
‘Yes…’ he faltered.
She moved over a stool, took a pair of hooked scissors with threads, and asked him place his hand over a pad of cotton cushion. ‘You can look away if you like.’
He looked away, awaiting the moment, which seemed to have taken many seconds longer, in the meanwhile he heard her still pulling and playing about things.
Now, something cold and sharp pierced the skin, he flinched. ‘Don’t move,’ she said.
He didn’t move, but all his nerves gathered at the cold tip jolting about the skin piece. The pain was never so excruciating when the thread was running through it. Then at the second stitch, out of curiosity, he turned to see the operation, watching his flesh being pieced by her. Again, she was all absorbed in her minor yet intensive task, in a manner of perfecting a line of artwork. For a moment, in spite of his feebleness, she was reminding him of his mother knitting a sweater for him. The concentration was almost the same.
He shuddered, when another stitch was dragging through.
When at last she told him the operation was complete, he could hardly feel any relief, for his stress was still full on the nerve. At any rate, he made an effort to see the result. Covered with streaks of blood, and with threads in and out along the line, it looked very ugly.
Feeling slightly faint, he remained seated, while she went to get the gauze, and came back to wrap for him. When the last strip wound around his palm, she declared, with a smile of relaxation, ‘All done.’
He arose to go, then all the sudden, he felt dizzy and had to support himself on the edge of the table.
‘Are you all right? You look so white,’ she said, immediately supporting him by his arm and leading him towards a bed. ‘Lie down, take a rest, let me fetch you a cup of sugar water.’
He made an effort in raising his feet, and lay on his back, and closed his eyes.
Then he heard her coming over, propped up his head with her arm and fed him with the water. He drank, and lay down again. ‘Rest a while, you will be fine.’ She went out of the room.
In a couple of minutes, he sensed he had fully recovered. He sat up slowly, moved his feet off the bed, shook his head a bit to verify his stability, and standing, walked himself out.
Sitting on her chair, she turned, and smiled to him, ‘You are like a child, fearing so much pain.’
He said, timidly, ‘Well, I have never done this before, maybe next time, I will...’
‘You want next time?’ she short cut his words with a pending smile.
He watched the mirthfulness in her face, discerning truly or falsely first time, apart from her kindness and gentleness as a doctor, a special feminine attention towards him in her now humorous expression.
He was just smiling.
‘Now, come over, sign on it,’ she called, ‘in about a week, maybe the next Saturday afternoon, you come over again for me to remove the stitches.’
Bing took the chance to talk, ‘See, there is a second time, to endure the pain.’
‘Haha,’ she was delighted, her teeth as white as her gown. ‘Hope you won’t faint over again, otherwise, I will.’
‘Hehe...’
He signed on the paper, ready to go. ‘Thank you…’ he said, and then added, ‘Sorry, I didn’t get your name.’
‘I have a surname same as you.’
‘Thank you, doctor Wang,’ he said, ‘So, see you next time.’
‘Bye.’
At the door threshold, he turned to give her another look. She was now treating another patient on the waiting room. She must be nearing thirty, ten years older than himself.
Slowly strolling along, and feeling the throbbing pain of his hand, he soon reached and began descending the famous 157 Steps, which was a steep stone-staircase taken as a shortcut from the Western Hill district to the rest of the campus. To its end was linked an old-fashioned, arched stone-bridge, which was longer, higher, and bigger than the one in Shangwai. Under the bridge was a stream, where the clear and clean water was singing, running itself into the pebbles, pushing up white splashes in its course. Past the bridge was another zigzag staircase upwards the building he lived in. The district was called Mirror Lake Hill, probably referring to a lake in the northern east of the campus.
On Monday, his students asked him what had happened to his hand, and he told that he had been bitten by a monkey in his weekend tour to Emei Mountain. None of the students had the least doubt about his second invention after the first one he had told Doctor Wang. And, at the end of class, he gave a narrative writing task to the students. The title was ‘Mr. Wang and the Emei monkey’. The enthusiasm shown to the assignment was evident with the waves of rippling laughter in the classroom. There were about sixty fresh, year 1991 students from the two classes majored in Electric Locomotive.
Though it was his first job, without a chance to make a sensible comparison, he thought he liked his teacher’s role fairly well. In the class, in the midst of the young faces, he had less chance to be gloomy and pessimistic. Most of the students came from poor villages like him; he talked to them, looked at them, reflecting upon his own university life four years earlier. It was true he hadn’t planned to be a teacher, rather than assigned by Shangwai out of Jiaoda’s application. But he couldn’t have wished for anything better.
Founded in year 1898, originally in Shanhaiguan in Heibei province, and then named as Imperial Chinese Railway College, Jiaoda was the first school in China specially set up for the purpose of railway construction. Since then, the school had been constantly moving and seeking an ideal location for a final establishment, adopting numerous names under different authority of various governments, having a history mirroring the turbulent China during the last one hundred years. Tangshan was the place where it had stayed most of the time, while Shanghai, Hunan, and Guizhou were other places it had been forced to migrated to. It had even ended up homeless for some period during Japanese invasion. In 1964 it was moved to Emei and had ever since stayed there for 25 years. In its expanding plan in year 1991, the same year of Bing’s arrival, the school decided to move its headquarter to Chengdu, with the Emei campus remaining as a branch. Because of the expansion, it was understandable the university was short of many teachers.
The migration or duplication of faculties from Emei to Chengdu had been happening for some time. The two-bedroom unit he was living in, was actually vacated by some other teachers who had lately gone to Chengdu. It was a luxury with only one instead of two taking the room, but it could be changed at any time to accommodate two single teachers, which was the usual living condition provided by the university.
Like many other teachers who were still in Emei, Bing was likely required to move to Chengdu, depending on how the resources were to be balanced between two campuses.
However, he didn’t very much favour the idea of living in Chengdu, for it was just another crowded city though to lesser extent compared to Shanghai. But there were a couple of advantages staying in the capital city, one was that his childhood friend Kai was also in Chengdu, the other being that it would take less time for him to go back home. Otherwise, Emei was a perfect place for his current disposition, even though most of his off-class time would see him wandering about like a lone and sentimental wolf, or like a tramp who has to miss the cosiness of a home settlement he was passing.
Consciously or unconsciously he was yearning for the sort of warmth and care like what he had received from doctor Wang. During the week, he was thinking of her, almost impatient for his chance to see her again. The way she handled his hand, the closeness and strange intimacy ensued between her and him were something new and luring in his current vacancy of being. It was indeed the first time, since the miserable end with Vivian, that he had begun to feel a wanting for someone to fill his lonely hours.
So, after a week’s stirring in his manhood, he went to see her with an excitement and a certain expectation, to watch her doing her little but no less sensational surgery again. In the Saturday morning, he dressed the best as he believed, loitering on the pretty campus, before heading for his lunch.
Then after the two hours of noon break as the usual Chinese work routine, the afternoon came. With a heart that had been sufficiently stimulated and stewed up to the minute, he went in the medical centre, asking for her at the reception counter.
He was told she was not in today, and he felt like the one with a face heated a while by the sun, then cooled by a pour of rain. But he was bold enough to ask when she would be in, and was told she would be in on Sunday.
So next day he walked again into the room. At his first sight of her smiling face, he found her a woman of good attraction, especially her lips, which were rich and sensuous, and curved, and nicely shaped, thick in the middle…
He was interrupted by her, ‘How are you feeling?’
‘Tickling all the time.’
‘That is good, healing well,’ she said. ‘Sit down, let me check it.’
Both of them seated, she started peeling off the strips, his hand responding with a mixture of feelings, pain and exciting.
The wound was exposed, the threads were darkly stained with the solid blood. He had actually checked himself two days before, knowing it had been going well. Yet at this moment, under her keen eyes, held by her fingers, under her rich lips, he fancied it being loved and kissed by her.
‘Good,’ she said, raising her head, and regarding him with a challenging smile as if he was a child in kindergarten. ‘Now let me take off the lines.’
‘What if we don’t take them off,’ he said, designing more talks between them, ‘will they become a kind of flesh?’
She was half amused, grinning, ‘Yes, it will, but no matter how long, they will not become Your flesh, understand?’
‘Understand,’ he assented, but in his mind, it sounded more like ‘No matter how long she is with you, she will not become part of you.’
She set to work: cut the lines into short sections, picked the thread with tweezers, and pulled it out one after another. It was tingling, but more like bitter-joy than the pure pain he had experienced last time.
It had finished too fast.
That done, she asked him to sign on the paper again. ‘Keep it dry as usual, until it is fully well.’ was her last plain, doctoring advice to him.
He was out. Less than five minutes, the hopeful appointment he had seriously meditated for a long week had completed. Now, his face was not cooled by the rain but chilled by the ice of dejection.
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