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Authors: K'Anne Meinel

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BOOK: Doctored
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They all agreed on that and the conversation moved on to what Lenny was doing as a teacher.  Fluent in both the local dialect as well as Afrikaans, French, and English, she was well-prepared to help out in the clinic as well as teach.  She had worked hard with Deanna to educate on more than the three ‘Rs’, which would help both the next generation and those women who were attending her classes.

“What do you think of Alex?” Leida asked as she smiled shyly.  It was obvious that the Australian had a crush on the administrator who would soon be leaving—once he had fully trained Thomas, who had a lot to learn.

They laughed and openly discussed Alex and Thomas and their potential as mates, even dates.  Neither of the nurses realized that Deanna didn’t participate in the conversation other than to smile and nod.  She seemed to look at the scenery frequently as the two women laughed like school girls over the attributes of the two men. 

“No, I wouldn’t date him,” Maddie disagreed with Leida about Thomas.  She knew not to put Alex down as the other woman had staked an artificial claim to him, even if he wasn’t aware of it.

“Why not?  Have a fling while you are here,” the Aussie encouraged.  Even Lakesh smiled at that and laughed at the women.  He had learned long ago that these Westerners were a lot different from the African people.

“I don’t see anyone else having a fling except for Hamishish,” she answered tartly.

At the mention of their friend, Deanna finally contributed.  “For her, it’s a duty,” she commented.

“Isn’t she more like a prostitute then?”

Deanna shook her head.  “You need to open up your mind more.  Stop thinking with your American values and morals.  It’s an
honor
to sleep with Hamishish,” she tried explaining.

“But they give her things in exchange for her honors,” she pointed out with a chuckle.

Deanna shook her head again.  “You have to understand it from their point of view.  She helps out with their spiritual well-being.  She is almost as important, if not more so, than their elders or leaders of the tribe.  All the different tribes that come through here,” she indicated Lakesh, where they had come from, “have different ideals, and despite cultural differences, they understand a medicine woman such as she.”

“I thought she was magic?” Leida asked.

“She is, but not in the way that a Western-raised person would think.  Remember when I had the leaders and Hamishish clean out the wards?”  As both of the women nodded, she continued, “The patients believed it was spiritually cleaned so they healed better, faster even, because it’s in their mindset.  If we didn’t believe in ourselves or what we were raised to believe, we would lose more than our faith.  It’s in the body and mind that the healing begins.”

Both women looked at the doctor thoughtfully.  It was Maddie who asked, “Do you think you are a medicine woman?  Do they?”

Deanna nodded.  “Some do.  I don’t claim the title.  If they choose to bestow it on me, who am I to argue if it helps them get better?”

The conversation continued until they arrived in Mamadu some two hours later.  In rapid French, Deanna asked for directions to specific locations.  “I’m going to be a couple of hours if you two want to explore.  Stay together though, as you are Western women and white.  Do not go anywhere alone,” she warned.

“What about you?” Leida asked, curious as to why the doctor was ditching them.  She already saw some open markets she wanted to explore and spend some money in.

“I’m taking Lakesh,” she said brightly.

They agreed to check in two hours later at the Rover.  Maddie saw Deanna talking to Lakesh and then they went their separate ways.  She was suspicious, but had gone off willingly with Leida; she too wanted to see the markets.  She wondered the whole two hours where the doctor had gone off to.

Deanna made her way first to a hotel where, for a fee, she was able to take a hot shower.  She changed into clothes she had brought and for the first time in weeks felt clean from the dust and bugs that were a constant around Mamadu.  No matter how many cold showers she took, a hot shower made all the difference.  After a surgery, they washed with antiseptic.  Unfortunately, that frequently dried out their skin.  One of the things she bought in Lamish was, bottles of lotion without alcohol in them to soothe her skin.  She made a few phone calls from the hotel room she had rented.  It was a nice room, better than what the prostitutes rented by the hour.  She had seen the look on the desk clerk’s face when she asked about renting it for so short a time.  The speculation had been immediate.  Her money was taken easily enough, but she knew if they wanted they could throw her out and keep the funds.  She went out to do some of her own shopping and easily met up with the others at the two-hour mark.  All of them had many bags and boxes in their hands.

“Let’s pack these in here,” she suggested and then asked Lakesh to sit in the Rover to keep sticky hands from pilfering their purchases.  “If you two want to take showers, I took a room upstairs,” she indicated the hotel down the block.  “I got a hot shower and can do some more shopping if you two want a turn.”

A hot shower sounded good to the two of them.  Leida reached back into one of the bags and took out a colorful dress to change into as Maddie was handed the key to the room.  It was an old-fashioned iron key on a large fob so it was likely the original key to the door of the room and less likely to be stolen.

“You want me come with you?” Lakesh asked the doctor as the other two began to leave.

“No, please stay here and watch the Rover.  We don’t want things taken,” she repeated, hoping her voice didn’t sound exasperated at having to repeat herself to their guide.  He was a nice guy, just tended to want to be a little too helpful now and then, forgetting what they had just said.  He ran errands all over the camp and probably made a trip into the port at least once or twice a week to fetch packages or supplies.  He also had a nice little side business on the black market he thought no one in camp knew about.  All the doctors and nurses knew and kept him away from their supplies, just in case.  He did, however, find them some rare medicines and supplies from time to time.

He watched as the doctor went into another alleyway and almost got out to warn her not to go in there, but she obviously knew where she was going.  She didn’t notice that Maddie was watching where she went too.  They all returned to the Rover some time later and waited for the good doctor to show up.  She returned with some more bags and boxes and took the key back to the hotel to check out, not saying a word about where she had been.  Maddie, who had showered first and come back downstairs, had seen her in the market—an arm around a woman, talking earnestly to her—but she had disappeared in the crowds of shoppers down one of the aisles and Maddie hadn’t wanted to follow.  She wondered about it though.

As they drove slowly back towards Mamadu they resumed their conversation about dating and Harlan’s name came up.  “He’s a nice enough bloke if you don’t mind never expressing your own opinion,” Leida commented and the women laughed.

“What about Lenny?” Maddie asked thoughtfully.

“Lenny and Harlan?”

“No, I mean, who would you see her paired off with?”

“I’d say Hamishish, but I don’t think Hamishish is into gals,” Leida said with a grin.

“You mean Lenny is...” gasped the redhead.

“Well, there are certain signs,” the Aussie replied.

Imperceptibly, Deanna stiffened in the front seat.  She had been listening in case she wanted to turn around and contribute, but the turn the conversation had taken meant she was staring out the cracked and spider-webbed windshield firmly.

“You really think she’s into...?” Maddie asked, not sounding as shocked as she had the moment before.

“Well, you know...I just sense she isn’t into guys,” her voice lowered conspiratorially.

The two of them continued their conversation, never noticing that Deanna didn’t join in from the front seat.  Later as the ebb and flow of it continued, Maddie noticed that Deanna must have fallen asleep in the front seat; her eyes were closed and she seemed relaxed.

They arrived back in Mamadu to find the place in an uproar with new patients arriving.  Apparently some skirmish or another had broken out west of the camp and they were bringing the casualties here into their village and camp.  Word of mouth had spread and the three doctors were needed and so were the nurses.  Lakesh promised to unload the Rover into their tent while the three medical personnel hurried off into the clinic to help.

Later, much later, a blood-spattered and sweating Deanna made her way back to the tent to find all the boxes and bags stacked neatly inside the door.  She was grateful that Lakesh had done what he promised.  She pretended not to notice that one or two boxes of what she had purchased had gone missing.  She separated her purchases from Maddie’s and Leida’s.

“You okay?” Maddie asked from the doorway as Deanna finished straightening up her things.

“Yeah,” she sighed gustily.  “I just need a shower.  You pour, I pour?” she asked with a grin.  It was a common enough practice that two would go to the showers and pour for the other.

Maddie nodded with a grin as she went to get some clean clothes.

 

CHAPTER SEVEN

 

Some of the boxes that Deanna had brought back contained athletic shoes.  She gifted them to specific people within the tribe.  A luxury that few, if any, had seen.  She’d been appalled to see them wearing plastic bottles on their feet to protect them from the rocks and thorns that abounded throughout the landscape.  Guessing at sizes, she’d been pretty fortunate that most of the shoes she had bought fit those she bestowed them on.  It was a matter of prestige to ceremoniously give away their footwear to others who used the plastic bottles tied to their feet as foot coverings.  The athletic shoes were a novelty.  They might not last, but for now it made those wearing them look impressive. 

It was as she distributed the shoes that others realized that Christmas was not too far away.  It was hot and sweltering and those from northern climes were used to having snow.  It was Deanna who had the idea of showing the school children the Christian practice of having a Christmas tree.  Since pine trees were non-existent on these plains, she made one out of surgical gloves.  Getting others to help her blow up the gloves, they attached them to a short pole.  The fingers pointing out provided great ‘branches’ to hang ornaments from.  They weren’t exactly ornaments like you would find on a Christmas tree, but the students enthusiastically helped with the idea, using their imagination and the pictures in Lenny’s books, which showed snow and decorated pine trees.  A bit of cotton around the base provided the snow.  They laughed together when the gloves slowly lost air and deflated.  It was a challenge to keep it looking ‘Christmassy.’

“Doctor Cooper, I think that is a terrible waste of resources,” Doctor Burton censured her, making sure there were witnesses to make the impact of his message more humiliating.

Deanna had been prepared for this ever since she had made a point of giving gifts to the village elders and notables and incorporating western culture into the festivities.  “Yes, I’d agree, if they were your resources,” she nodded sympathetically.

“These aren’t from our supplies?” he asked, confused.

“Nope, part of my private stock,” she assured him with a friendly smile.  “But don’t worry, I’m almost out, so you can find something then.”  With that she walked away, leaving him blushing and gasping at her audacity.  She had no respect for his authority!  He went to Alex to have him inventory their gloves and provide him with proof that she had used the clinic’s stores.

“God, that man!” she sputtered as she entered their tent that evening.

“Have a wee bit of problem with the good Doctor Burton?” Lenny asked astutely from her cot where she was playing solitaire with a deck of cards.

“How’d you guess?” she fumed as she walked over to her cot and sat down angrily.

“He’s been jonesing for you since you got here,” she commented astutely.

“Yeah, he hasn’t liked you since day one,” Magda added.  She was already under her blanket, trying to doze off, unsuccessfully, but she wasn’t tired enough, not yet, and joined in the conversation.

“It’s not my fault he didn’t know who I was,” she answered as she unlaced her high boots and pulled her sweaty feet from one and then the other.  Slowly she peeled the socks off, noting she couldn’t wear them a second day in this heat.

“It was pretty funny that he accepted you as a mechanic, but not as a doctor,” Magda laughed as she remembered his face that first day.

“Maybe he has a crush on you,” Leida put in.  She was dressed in pajamas for bed, but lying on top of the blankets.

“Gawd,” Deanna shuddered at the thought.

“Yeah,” Lenny agreed, laughing, as she faked a dramatic shudder.

This got Deanna laughing as she smiled at her friends.  Laughing at irritations was the best way to struggle through them.  At least Doctor Wilson believed in her and liked her ideas.  He allowed her to do her work without interference, but if Doctor Burton had had his way, she would have been packed off already.  She had received a letter forwarded from France asking if she would stay longer at Mamadu. The next plane of Doctors Without Borders that could come in, would come in.  She had taken her own Rover off for a ride to the next village and worked all day alone, much to the anger of Alex who kept track of such things for their clinic.  It further angered Wilson when she couldn’t be found and he lectured her on going off by herself.

BOOK: Doctored
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