Shotstory
The use of Force
by Carlos Williams
They were new patients to me, all I had was the name, Olson. Please
come down as soon as you can, my daughter is very sick. When I arrived I
was met by the mother, a big startled looking woman, very clean and
apologetic who merely said, Is this the doctor? and let me in. In the
back, she added.
You must excuse us, doctor, we have her in the kitchen where it is
warm. It is very damp here sometimes. The child was fully dressed and
sitting on her father's lap near the kitchen table. He tried to get up,
but I motioned for him not to bother, took off my overcoat and started
to look things over.
I could see that they were all very nervous, eyeing me up and down
distrustfully. As often, in such cases, they
weren't telling me more than they had to, it was up to me to tell them;
that's why they were spending three dollars on me.
The child was fairly eating me up with her cold, steady eyes, and no
expression to her face whatever. She did not move and seemed, inwardly,
quiet; an unusually attractive little thing, and as strong as a heifer
in appearance. But her face was flushed, she was breathing rapidly, and
I realized that she had a high fever.
She had magnificent blonde hair, in profusion. One of those picture
children often reproduced in advertising leaflets and the photogravure
sections of the Sunday papers.
She's had a fever for three days, began the father and we don't know
what it comes from. My wife has given her things, you know, like people
do, but it don't do no good.
And there's been a lot of sickness around. So we tho't you'd better
look her over and tell us what is the matter. As doctors often do I took
a trial shot at it as a point of departure.
Has she had a sore throat? Both parents answered me together, No . .
. No, she says her throat don't hurt her. Does your throat hurt you?
added the mother to the child.
But the little girl's expression didn't change nor did she move her
eyes from my face. Have you looked? I tried to, said the mother, but I
couldn't see.
As it happens we had been having a number of cases of diphtheria in
the school to which this child went during that month and we were all,
quite apparently, thinking of that, though no one had as yet spoken of
the thing. Well, I said, suppose we take a look at the throat first.
I smiled in my best professional manner and asking for the child's
first name I said, come on, Mathilda, open your mouth and let's take a
look at your throat.Nothing doing. Aw, come on, I coaxed, just open your
mouth wide and let me take a look. Look, I said opening both hands wide,
I haven't anything in my hands. Just open up and let me see.
Such a nice man, put in the mother. Look how kind he is to you. Come
on, do what he tells you to. He won't hurt you. At that I ground my
teeth in disgust. If only they wouldn't use the word "hurt" I might be
able to get somewhere. But I did not allow myself to be hurried or
disturbed but speaking quietly and slowly I approached the child again.
As I moved my chair a little nearer suddenly with one catlike
movement both her hands clawed instinctively for my eyes and she almost
reached them too. In fact she knocked my glasses flying and they fell,
though unbroken, several feet away from me on the kitchen floor. Both
the mother and father almost turned themselves inside out in
embarrassment and apology. You bad girl, said the mother, taking her and
shaking her by one arm.
Look what you've done. The nice man . . .For heaven's sake, I broke
in. Don't call me a nice man to her. I'm here to look at her throat on
the chance that she might have diphtheria and possibly die of it. But
that's nothing to her.
Look here, I said to the child, we're going to look at your throat.
You're old enough to understand what I'm saying. Will you open it now by
yourself or shall we have to open it for you)Not a move. Even her
expression hadn't changed.
Her breaths however were coming faster and faster. Then the battle
began. I had to do it. I had to have a throat culture for her own
protection. But first I told the parents that it was entirely up to
them.
I explained the danger but said that I would not insist on a throat
examination so long as they would take the responsibility. If you don't
do what the doctor says you'll have to go to the hospital, the mother
admonished her severely. Oh yeah? I had to smile to myself.
After all, I had already fallen in love with the savage brat, the
parents were contemptible to me. In the ensuing struggle they grew more
and more abject, crushed, exhausted while she surely rose to magnificent
heights of insane fury of effort bred of her terror of me.
The father tried his best, and he was a big man but the fact that she
was his daughter, his shame at her behavior and his dread of hurting her
made him release her just at the critical times when I had almost
achieved success, till I wanted to kill him.
But his dread also that she might have diphtheria made him tell me to
go on, go on though he himself was almost fainting, while the mother
moved back and forth behind us raising and lowering her hands in an
agony of apprehension. Put her in front of you on your lap, I ordered,
and hold both her wrists. But as soon as he did the child let out a
scream. Don't, you're hurting me.
Let go of my hands. Let them go I tell you. Then she shrieked
terrifyingly, hysterically. Stop it! Stop it! You're killing me! Do you
think she can stand it, doctor! said the mother. You get out, said the
husband to his wife. Do you want her to die of diphtheria? Come on now,
hold her, I said.
Then I grasped the child's head with my left hand and tried to get
the wooden tongue depressor between her teeth. She fought, with clenched
teeth, desperately! But now I also had grown furious--at a child.
I tried to hold myself down but I couldn't. I know how to expose a
throat for inspection. And I did my best. When finally I got the wooden
spatula behind the last teeth and just the point of it into the mouth
cavity, she opened up for an instant but before I could see anything she
came down again and gripping the wooden blade between her molars she
reduced it to splinters before I could get it out again.
Aren't you ashamed, the mother yelled at her. Aren't you ashamed to
act like that in front of the doctor? Get me a smooth-handled spoon of
some sort, I told the mother.
We're going through with this. The child's mouth was already
bleeding. Her tongue was cut and she was screaming in wild hysterical
shrieks. Perhaps I should have desisted and come back in an hour or
more. No doubt it would have been better.
But I have seen at least two children lying dead in bed of neglect in
such cases, and feeling that I must get a diagnosis now or never I went
at it again. But the worst of it was that I too had got beyond reason. I
could have torn the child apart in my own fury and enjoyed it. It was a
pleasure to attack her. My face was burning with it.
The damned little brat must be protected against her own idiocy, one
says to one's self at such times. Others must be protected against her.
It is a social necessity. And all these things are true.
But a blind fury, a feeling of adult shame, bred of a longing for
muscular release are the operatives. One goes on to the end. In a final
unreasoning assault I overpowered the child's neck and jaws. I forced
the heavy silver spoon back of her teeth and down her throat till she
gagged.
And there it was--both tonsils covered with membrane. She had fought
valiantly to keep me from knowing her secret. She had been hiding that
sore throat for three days at least and lying to her parents in order to
escape just such an outcome as this. Now truly she was furious.
She had been on the defensive before but now she attacked. Tried to
get off her father's lap and fly at me while tears of defeat blinded her
eyes. |