When the Wind Blows - James Patterson [4]
I could see the badly injured doe was pregnant. She was wild-eyed and thrashing when Duffy hefted her onto the table. Half-thrashing, in truth, because I suspected her spine was broken at midpoint, where she’d been clipped by the Chevy 4x4 that Duffy drives.
The little girl was sobbing and her father looked miserable. I thought he was going to break down, too.
“Money’s no object,” he said.
And money was no object because I knew nothing was going to save the doe. The fawn, however, was a maybe. If the mother was close to term. If it hadn’t been mashed too badly by the four-thousand-pound truck. And a few more ifs besides.
“I can’t save the doe,” I said to the girl’s father. “I’m sorry.”
Duffy nodded. He was a local builder, and also one of the local hunters. A real knucklehead, in my humble opinion. Thoughtless probably described him best, and maybe that was his best quality. I could only imagine how he must be feeling now, this man who usually bragged on his kill, with his little girl begging to save the animal’s life. Among his other bad habits, Duffy occasionally stopped by and brazenly hit on me. A sticker on his 4x4 bumper read:Support Wildlife. Throw a Party.
“The fawn?” he asked.
“Maybe,” I said. “Help me get her gassed down and we’ll see.”
I gently slid the mask over the doe’s face. I kicked at the pedal and the halothane hissed through the tube. The doe’s brown eyes showed terror, but also unimaginable sadness. She knew.
The little girl grabbed the doe around the belly and started crying her heart out. I liked the girl a lot. Her eyes showed spunk and character. Duffy had done at least one good thing in his life.
“Damn, damn,” the father said. “I never saw her until she was on the hood. Do your best, Frannie,” he said to me.
I gently peeled the little girl off the deer. I held on to her shoulders and made her face me. “What’s your name, sweetie?”
“Angie,” she sobbed out.
“Angie, now listen to me, sweetheart. The doe doesn’t feel anything now, understand? It’s painless for her. I promise you.”
Angie pushed her face into my body and held me with all of her little-girl strength. I rubbed her back and told her that I would have to euthanatize the doe, but if its baby could be saved, there would be a lot of work to do.
“Please, please, please,” said Angie.
“You’re going to need a goat. For milk,” I said to Duffy. “Maybe two or three of them.”
“Not a problem,” he said. He would have acquired nursing elephants if I’d told him to. He just wanted his little girl to smile again.
I then asked both of them to please get out of the exam room and let me work. What I was about to do was a bloody, difficult, and ugly operation.
Chapter 2
IT WAS SEVEN in the evening when the Duffys came to the Inn-Patient, and maybe twelve minutes had already gone by. The poor doe was out cold and I felt so bad for her. Frannie the Sap—that’s what my sister, Carole, calls me. It was my husband David’s favorite nickname for me, too.
A little less than a year and a half ago, David was shot and killed in the physician’s parking lot at Boulder Community Hospital. I still hadn’t recovered from that, hadn’t grieved enough. It would have helped if the police had caught David’s murderer, but they hadn’t.
I cut along the abdominal line with my scalpel. I exteriorized the uterus, flipping it out intact onto the doe’s open belly. I cut again, this time through the uterine wall. I pulled out the fawn, praying I wasn’t going to have to put it down.
The fawn was about four months, nearly to term, and as best as I could tell, uninjured. I gently cleaned the babe’s air passages with my fingers and fitted a tiny mask over its muzzle.
Then I cranked on the oxygen. The fawn’s chest shuddered. It started to breathe.
Then it bawled. God, what a glorious sound. New life. Jeez, Louise, the whole magical thing still makes my heart go pitter-patter. Frannie the Sap.
Blood