The metal detector is once again in service, and this time I remember to take everything out of my pockets before rolling through. Am I the only one who finds that these props and performances make me feel more stifled than safe? As if I need another reminder that we live in a country that would rather install machines and pay thugs rather than stop letting people buy fucking guns.
Shelley has a big smile for me, and says that they’re preparing my room. When Caitlin comes to get me, I refuse to look up from my phone.
“Oh, so it’s going to be like this, is it?” She asks.
I sit there for another moment before saying “Oh, hey, I didn't see you there.”
“Just get in here.”
Everything in Room One has been rearranged. The chair is further back and the white board is on the opposite wall. The walls themselves have been painted, one blue and the others beige.
“This is the big new paint job?” I ask.
“Yup. We’re not fans,” she says.
“Why are they different colors?” I launch again into my routine about painting a mural of wounds, which she of course thinks is brilliant.
“Now you’re in for it!” screams CK. Her eyes are sparkling and crinkling with laugh lines. It’s ridiculous how happy I am to see her, how good it feels to have the three of us in this room again. Recently my already-severe loneliness has metastasized. After not seeing her for months, CK looks like a homecoming queen.
“By the way, Jenny and Gretchen say hi,” she says. “They saw you were on the schedule.”
Caitlin says the wound doesn’t look too bad. I tell her I’ve been trying to be careful, but that I have to walk a bit at work. “Yeah, that skin stays delicate for a while,” she says. “You have new shoes, right?” I tell her I haven’t even had a chance to wear them out of the house yet.
She sits at the computer while CK measures the wound. “Point nine, possibly one point oh,” she says. “I can’t tell.”
“Pretty sure it’s point nine,” I say. “Possibly even point eight.”
“Well if someone would hold their foot straight then maybe I could measure it properly.”
“Is there undermining?” asks Caitlin.
“No undermining. Hey, they’re redoing all the pipes in my condo!” She throws out her paper ruler and swab and bounces over to the side of my chair, where she repeatedly grabs my arm as she tells me the saga. “Everyone here is sick of hearing about this so I’ll torture you with it. It’s an old complex and they suddenly decide they have to replace all the pipes. So first they did the kitchen, and they totally dented the dishwasher, then tried to deny it…”
Everything disappears except for a flouncing red ponytail, a slender neck, a hand on my arm.
You know, this is pretty pathetic, a voice inside myself says.
Shut up and let me enjoy myself for once, I hiss.
“So I picked white tile with gray grout,” she’s saying. “And because of the dishwasher thing, they're not charging me any extra to go all the way up to the ceiling! It’ll be nice to be able to take a shower again. I really reek.”
“I didn’t want to say anything. How’s Cathy?” I ask.
“Oh she has a new suitor, a big black boy with these crazy green eyes…”
“Hello!” cries Dr. Taggert, coming through the curtain like a talk show host. “Your A1C is so good! You’re not diabetic anymore! I mean, you are, but way to go!”
“Well, sure, but then there’s this thing again,” I say.
“I know but I wanted to start out positive.”
“Thanks. I still have work to do but it’s much better than it was, and I feel good about that.”
“You should! It’s really impressive. And this really doesn’t look too bad,” she says, unwrapping a scalpel and slicing the dead skin. Shelley slips in and takes a seat at the computer.
“Well, I didn’t wait months to come in this time,” I say. “I’m learning. Just very, very slowly. I’ve mostly been really good, but it’s hard to stay off it at work. I’ll probably have to get you to write a note for me to stay off it for a while, and I’m not sure if they’ll let me work through that.”
“Well they can’t fire you. You can sue!”
“No but it could complicate things, and I’m scared of that,” I say.
“Well once you have the shoes on, this shouldn’t happen,” says the doctor. “But I know the in-between time is tricky. Have you heard of an AFO?”
“You mean we’re going to use alien technology?” I say excitedly.
“Ha, AFO, not UFO. It’s a sort of brace that is made that wrap around the bottom of your foot so you don’t put pressure on the front part.”
“Wow, that sounds like exactly what I need.”
Shelley turns the monitor screen to face me. She has the Amazon screen pulled up, with various forms of braces. They don’t honestly look all that bad.
“What does AFO stand for?” I ask.
“You know what, I don’t know,” the doctor says.
“Ankle foot orthosis,” reads Shelley.
“Not orthotic?” asks the doctor.
“Orthosis.”
“Huh. Anyways, Evergreen should be able to get you fitted for one. The trick is I don’t know if insurance covers them. But I can send them a referral if you’re interested.”
“Are you kidding? Let’s try it,” I say. Why the hell haven’t we tried it before, the little voice in my head asks.
Shh, I tell it. This is not the time for that.
But seriously, it insists. Doesn’t this sound like something that would’ve been helpful since the first time we healed up? Why the hell didn’t she…
We’ll discuss this later, I say.
Yes but…
LATER.
“So we’ll hold off on putting you in a TCC until Evergreen can see you. I mean, if that’s what you want.”
“If you think that’s best, I’m fine with a cast.”
“Okay good. In the meantime we’ll put you in a football. I’ll send this out and you should call them in a few days. In the meantime Dede or Perez will call you to make your next appointment.”
“You’ll probably make it on a Thursday because you hate us so much,” says CK.
“It wasn’t my fault!” I whine. “Dede kept saying that was all she had! You know you’re both my favorites. I think she’s trying to keep me from you.”
“She might be,” KC says.
“And Thursdays are so…quiet!” I say.
“Yeah, a certain other doctor here doesn’t like laughter,” says Caitlin, wrapping my foot in a football.
“I’ve noticed that,” I say. “Though I’ve barely seen her this year what with her being away. It’s been mostly substitutes, which honestly has not been great. And when I left it was so anticlimactic. There was no closure. I mean, on my foot there was. But there should’ve been a party to celebrate my graduation. A parade through the corridors!”
Encouraged by their laughter, I have become increasingly boisterous. The prodigal patient has returned. Girls are flirting with me, my blood sugar is stabilized, and there’s a new device for me to try that might actually help with the healing. I am moving in the right direction (not a word, little voice). I am making progress (I said not one word, little voice). Everything (stop it) is going (I mean it) to be fine.
KC runs to get my scooter and zooms around the office on it, whooping gleefully. I yell at her not to wreck it but she ignores me, and when she disappears around the corner I hear a crash.
I miss the bus, so I sit in the lobby and read for a while. I’m surprised to see that even though it’s close to six, the guard is still herding people through the metal detector, though he’s paying more attention to his phone. He doesn’t even look up when the alarms are set off by a man who walks right through and says, “This is such bullshit.” I feel so safe.
On the bus, an old man across the aisle smiles and laughs continuously to himself, a loud, forced “HA. HAHAHA. HA.” He continues to laugh until we get to where I make my transfer, at which point he gets up and hurries off the bus.
“Hold on, I’ll get a little closer for you,” the driver tells me, and pulls up a few feet.
The old man is standing there on the curb, waiting to get back on. I carefully disembark and he steps in, his face frozen in a deep scowl.
Everyone is losing their shit, the voice in my head says. I try to argue but I’m suddenly very tired.