Nurse Jess (2 page)

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Authors: Joyce Dingwell

Tags: #Harlequin Romance 1959

BOOK: Nurse Jess
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The Average Only pass had worried her considerably. Once she had known what she wanted it had become an intolerable thought that for her Belinda might have closed doors.

Then the cable had arrived in the middle of her aftergraduation break at home on Crescent Island
...
an interview prior to an appointment to the Lady Belinda Hospital for Specialized Nursing of Premature Babies ... ten days from this date
... Tuesday the eighteenth
...
sharply at four.

Sharply
... It was now after three. She would never make it. She should have come on Ba

s previous trip, but Mummy and Dad had wanted to keep her right up to the final minute, and she hadn

t been able to stand firm.


B-Barry
—”
Again the quivering lip, the tear.


Get back to your seat and fasten your belt, kid.


We

re going down?


Down, though if I had a grain of sense in my thick
head I would
.
But there, it wouldn

t do me any good,
would it?


None at all,

Jessa assured him heartlessly, and went back to her window chair.

There were only three passengers besides herself—Crescent was a small island and the run just as small—Mr. Winthrop bringing samples of his coffee and tobacco to try on the Sydney market, Mrs. Winthrop accompanying him to do some personal shopping instead of using store catalogues as the Crescent Islanders did, Tommy Swinson going back to boarding school. None of them would mind, thought Jess, if she was first through the door.

The plane was descending lower, lower, touching down smoothly. As usual Barry made a good landing. He was an excellent pilot.

She went to the cockpit again.

I won

t wait for you, I

ll grab a cab.


You

ve half an hour precisely.


If there was no traffic, I could do it in twenty minutes.


If you snared a taxi,

he grinned.


I

ll snare one,

she assured.

She did, though with difficulty. The first one edged away when she called,

The Lady Belinda, please,

and she remembered too late that Belinda was a hospital for premature infants. The second time she called in a rush,

Belinda, I

m a nurse there—at least I hope to be—


Get in,

the taxi-man said.

He was a nice man. When she told him she was in a hurry he thought out cross-country routes and short cuts through quiet byways to defeat the snarled traffic.


Our youngster put his first six weeks in at Belinda,

he said appreciatively.

Fed by a feeding bottle, miss, no more than three inches long, he was so small. He isn

t now. He

s a whopper.


Here we are, and that

s the best time you could have made it
.
It

s four dead.

Is my career dead? That

s the important thing, fretted
Jessa, not waiting for change from her fare, running up the drive to the front steps.

She knew the exterior of Belinda by heart now, she had walked by it so often
... the grey stone, the stout pillars, the big glass door.

She pushed the portal and scurried in like a
madcap
wind, the door rocking madly to and fro behind her. Jennifer had said discipline was like it had been in pro days here, which meant that tardiness would be a sin.

But so also was the careless shutting of a portal, it seemed. Almost from nowhere—or so it appeared to Jessa—loomed a large, broad-bosomed, grey-clad matron. Was it chance that she was passing along the front corridor, or had she been waiting, steely eye on her watch, for a certain applicant with an appointment timed for four sharp?


Miss Barlow, I presume.

The voice did not wait for agreement but went busily on.

While we

re here on the spot, Miss Barlow, kindly know now that a mothercraft nurse never
opens
a door and
enters,
she
arrives.
Arrives gently, softly, soundlessly, you understand? Specialized infant nursing demands careful restraint.


Yes, Matron.

She
must
be Matron with that important bosom and assured voice.

The bosom and the voice
were
Matron, otherwise Jessa would have been corrected. She was not corrected. Matron went busily on again.


Here in Belinda,

she said,

we also have a different code in names, kindly remember. One of our most valued advisers, a professor, has a theory that the very small child requires an aura of friendly pleasantry as much as physical nourishment. We do not therefore call each other any longer baldly by surnames. For instance, one of our supervising M.D.s is known as Doctor Elizabeth, another Doctor Mary;
I am Matron Martha; in time you will meet Sisters Helen, Valerie, Judith, others; fellow trainees are called Nurse, followed by their Christian name.

You understand?


Yes, Matron

I mean Matron Martha.

All this time Jessa was following close behind a ramrod back that was quite as substantial as the bosom. Up the stairs, up more stairs, down a passage—was that little distant weak squeak the call of a hungry prem?

Matron meanwhile had entered an office, her applicant behind her, and she was sorting papers.


Ah, here we are
... a graduate from Great Southern, I see. We already have a G.S. graduate here.


Sister Margaret.


Nurse
Margaret. You

re only a trainee at Belinda, remember. Those four years behind you, Nurse, don

t matter at all.

Don

t matter, thought Jessa bleakly
... Those special diets, those Nights, those dressings, those pans, those forty-eight back-breaking months.

Matron Martha was frow
n
ing over something.


Jessamine—well, really—Nurse
Jessamine.

She looked up at Jessa.

Any second name?

she asked.


No, only the one. It means Jasmine, which is a fragrant flower. It

s really only another for it, in fact. We

ve lots on the island. It

s even the name of our hotel.


The island?


Crescent Island. It

s coral and sub-tropical. It was a trading harbour originally, copra and shells, but now it might become a tourist resort.

Matron Martha said,

Humph.

Undoubtedly she was seeing hula girls waggling their hips, grass skirts, outrageously exaggerated stars, moons as big as ripe sugar melons. She looked annoyed.


It won

t do. Jessamine certainly won

t do, Miss Barlow.

She looked down on the form again, brow puckered, lips pursed.

Then triumphantly it came to her. The frown smoothed away, the mouth straightened.


That

s it, of course. You

ll be Nurse Jess.

 

CHAPTER II

JESS, Bess, Tess
... what did it matter?

She was here, she was accepted, she was to be a trainee at the Lady Belinda for Prems.

Only for Matron—no, Matron Martha—she would have executed a victory dance on the spot She knew all the actions already, every triumphant pose, she had even joined in with their Crescent Island natives once or twice.

But instead she listened rapturously to Matron Martha

s homily on what-was-expected at Belinda and what-was-not.

The lecture followed rather along the lines of the previous one on door closing. Gentleness, quietness, soundlessness, careful restraint. Jessa was reminded irresistibly of the old nursery rhyme:

Come when you

re called,

Do as you

re hid;

Shut the door after you,

Never be chid.


Are you listening, Nurse Jess?

reproached Matron Martha sharply.


Yes, Matron Martha.

Oh, dear, only five minutes in Belinda, thought Jessa, and already I

ve been

chid.

She paid more attention then. She hung on every word. Every year in this hospital, she learned from Matron, four hundred babies were nursed to normal; babies whose healthy survival sometimes seemed almost a miracle even in this scientific world.

There were usually about forty inmates and to deal with them a staff of twenty-three.


The infants need non-stop care every hour of the day, however, so you needn

t think you

ll be having a soft time because of the comparatively big staff,

warned Matron.


No, Matron Martha.


Also while you

re on duty, work never pauses, not like at the Great Southern.


We worked hard at G.S.


Nurse Jess, I shall not tolerate interruptions.


No, Matron Martha. Sorry, Matron Martha.

Only seven minutes gone, and her second chid.

More tolerantly Matron Martha explained,

I really meant
unceasing vigilance.
My memory of normal hospital work is that of a moment available here for a few words with a fellow nurse, a moment slipped in there for a short chat with a patient. It

s quite different at Belinda.


Yes, Matron Martha.


First thing in the morning,

Matron resumed,

if you

re on Days you will work in one of the busiest kitchens, I should say, in the hospital world. Bottles are made up, individual bottles (for every baby is on a special diet), to last twenty-four hours. Work that out and multiply it by forty, Nurse Jess.


Yes, Matron Martha,

nodded Jessa, who had never been good at mental arithmetic and would have required a pencil and pad to reach a result now.


Then there is the actual feeding,

said Matron.

Most of them are fed every two hours. Some are done intravenously, some by drops, some are given miniature bottles only three inches long.


The taxi-man

s son,

nodded Jessa knowledgeably—and clapped her hand over her mouth.


Sorry, Matron Martha.

Matron Martha looked her over coldly.

Chid Number Three, sighed Jess.


Then there are the emergencies you will be taught to cope with
... blood transfusions for Rh-factor babies, babies who have to be hand-pumped oxygen because they

re too small for an iron lung.


Another thing is equipment. It

s very expensive. You would not want to treat an isolet which costs four hundred pounds as you treated that front door.

The door again Jessa hung her head.


However,

buoyed Matron Martha, who seemed to like to push you under and then rescue you again,

there are certain intrinsic rewards. Costs, either in money or energy or sacrifice, don

t count in saving premature babies. The love and affection you give and get—yes, I really believe
get

in return are the best rewards on earth.


When an infant is finally discharged you will be happy that you have helped a child to the future that no doubt you have been dreaming up for him
... judge, engineer, statesman, who knows?


Tinker, tailor, soldier, sailor,

nodded Jessa Matron Martha said soberly, not chiding Jessa this time,

It

s all in our hands.

She told her new trainee where to find her uniforms and caps.

We none of us wear veils here.


Not even sisters?

Jessa thought of Rene and her anticipated veil instead of a cap, her brave red cape.

She must have murmured

cape

aloud, for Matron Martha said testily,

Don

t be stupid, Nurse Jess, there would be no need for anything so protective in our specially heated wards, and you surely have noticed that the rest of the building is centrally heated. Winter does not touch us here, we need no capes.

She seemed to have come to the end of her homily. She stacked the papers neatly and told Jessa where to look for the duty roster, and also where to find her room.


If on your way you meet a parent, that is quite in order. Many of our babies are long-term members, and parents are encouraged to have a short while with them whenever they can.


Yes, Matron Martha.


That is all, Nurse Jess.

Jess rose, neither opened nor went out of the door—or so she hoped—but discreetly disappeared.

Half an hour and a tally of three chids. Not so bad, she thought.

She remembered her directions. Up more stairs, first turn on the right, second turn on the left, Room Fifteen. She hoped Margaret would be somewhere close.

As she went to turn right after climbing the stairs she heard that little weak distant squeak again. It must be a prem, and she must steal her first look, she
must.

The squeak came from the left. She tiptoed down a long corridor. Like most hospital corridors, although it was still bright daylight, none the less it was lit. The illumination was placed in such a position that it sent shadows on the opposite wall. There was a shadow there now
...
a rather odd shadow
... someone all long arms and still longer legs. Jessa wanted to laugh.

She rounded the corner. She saw that there was a full
-
length panel of glass probably enclosing a nursery. There was also a warm powdery sweet baby smel
l.

She noticed that that someone shadowed on the wall was having a peep through the glass, and that of all people in this female-to-the-core hospital, it was a man. He was a very tall man with very long legs—almost daddy-long-legs, in fact. They were even long when he was doubling himself over to peer through
t
he glass. When he straightened up, she thought with intrigue, they would seem positively endless. He would be a parent, of course.

Her heart went out to him in tender sympathy. Poor new father, yearning to possess wholly, not just behind glass, his little helpless child.

She went forward impulsively and put a hand on his shoulder. It startled him, and he gave a squeak not so unlike that prem squeak, then he lost his balance and keeled over to the floor. On the way down he dropped his glasses

big, owl-like, horn-rimmed glasses. As he picked them up and replaced them rather lopsidedly across his nose and then got clumsily to his feet, Jessa whispered,

I

m so sorry, but which one is yours?

The glasses evidently had achieved some dust. He took them off again to clean them, peering at her as he did. He looked younger without them. At first sight she had thought he was rather an old father, but now she could see he was just about right.


I beg your pardon?

he blundered.


I asked which one was yours, but I think I can tell.
That
one. You have the same ears.


Have we?

He peered through the glass again critically and did not appear very exalted. Poor man, thought Jessa, he is worried about having to leave his baby here when he goes.


You musn

t fret,

she counselled, remembering Matron

s homily.

Every year at Belinda four hundred babies are nursed to normal; babies whose healthy survival sometimes seems a miracle, even in this scientific world.


Really?


I assure you. You

re not the only one who is undergoing all this. Tell me

—gently
—“
is this your first?

The man shook his head. He had shaggy hair that fell over his forehead at the slightest movement, so that the shake now touselled him entirely and even necessitated the removal of the owl glasses again because the movement had set them askew once more.


Oh, no,

he answered,

not by a long chalk. I mean
”—
hastily
—“
I

ve had plenty before.


Oh.

Jessa looked incredulously at him, saw that he was serious, then looked away, a trifle disconcerted. Well, that

s how it should be, she reminded herself stoutly; big families were this country

s greatest assets. He must be a fine parent to possess already his quiver-full and yet yearn after this last frail li
ttl
e one.


But none of them were inmates here, I suppose,

she smiled encouragingly.

He nodded unconcernedly, and touselled the shaggy hair a third time.

Yes, every one of them,

he said.


Oh.

Jessa uttered it rather blankly. She felt a little shocked somehow. To have a quiver-full and every one of them prems must be—well, discouraging to say the least. She must try and encourage this poor parent at once.


Never mind,

she soothed.

It was probably not your fault.

Feeling she was getting a little out of her depth and perhaps not being quite fair to his wife, she added breathlessly.

I would suggest you both attend some sort of clinic. I must go now. Goodbye, Mr.—?

The daddy-long-legs man murmured,

Gink.


Gink?


G-i-n-k.


Oh Well, good luck, anyhow, to you and your son.
Or is it a daughter?

She sincerely hoped not, not with those ears, because then it would not be able to wear earrings when it grew up, of course.


He

s a boy.


Then your son.

She smiled and was gone.

She took a while to get back to the spot where she had to mm first to the right, second to the left, but after losing herself in many corridors she found what she sought, Room Fifteen.

And when she opened the door, really opened it this time and entered, not just arrived, there was Margaret, dear, sweet Margaret, with violets in a violet vase and a spirit stove with a saucepan of water ready to brew tea.


I thought you

d never arrive, Jessa,

she greeted.

I

ve been here for hours.


I was waylaid by an anxious parent,

explained Jessamine importantly.

Oh, Margaret, you are a pet!

She buried her nose in the violets and came out with a dusting of pollen over her freckles.

You

ve bought buns, too. Have you started working yet? What

s it like? Are you on Days? Is the pace exhausting? Are the prems very difficult to hold, do you sort of feel they

ll break in two?

Margaret said,

I haven

t started,

and they both laughed.

They sat on the bed together and Margaret told Jessa about her own arrival. She appeared not once to have been

chid.


She

s really a splendid person, Matron Martha.


I suppose so—it was just that bosom, it seemed so hard.


Not with a baby in her arms, they

re calmed at once. Oh, Jessamine, this is a lovely worthwhile place.


I suppose so,

said Jessa again, still not quite so convinced as her friend.


Perhaps,

she sighed,

I

ll feel more at home when I fix my room.

Margaret watched her

fix

it. Her mother

s photo, her father

s, a snapshot of Lopi.


What on earth is that?

she asked.


Our volcano. It

s a sleeping one, of course. I always fetch it along with me. Some people bring lucky charms, I bring Lopi. Lopi is my talisman.

Jessa patted the odd picture of lava rock and crater and propped it against the violets.


What are our uniforms like?

she asked.


Well, not a tailored fit exactly if you

re between sizes, but then neither was Great Southern

s. A pleasant surprise, though, Jessa—colours!


Colours!

That
was
a surprise.


Any colours you fancy,

resumed Margaret.

It appears that this valued adviser of Belinda

s, this professor who believes in
—”


Friendly pleasantry,

interrupted Jessa with a grin,

and no more bald surnames and speaking of that,
Nurse Margaret,
I

m to be
Nurse Jess.

Margaret smiled patiently back at her.

It appears,

she concluded,

that she also believes in cheerful hues in preference to cold hygienic white. You can choose whatever your mood tells you

, and you can have a different colour every
day if you wish. And you don

t wear a veil, of course.


I know, Matron Martha told me. Not even the sisters wear them.

Margaret nodded.

The folds might get in the way, I presume; this is very exacting work.

They both sat silent a moment in the little room, thinking their own private thoughts. The hospital was full of the usual quiet hospital noises. Somewhere outside came the sound of traffic, but it was pleasingly muted and somehow friendly.


When do you go on duty, Margaret?

asked Jessa.


I haven

t looked yet. I thought I

d wait for that pleasure with you.

Jessa flashed her an appreciative smile.

You mean you knew I

d forget as usual where I was inst
ruc
ted to find the roster. You

re a pet, Meggy, let

s go now.

As they descended the stairs together, Jessa argued aloud with herself as to colours.

Yellow is cheerful, but my hair goes with blue.


No need to worry about one

s complexion, anyway,

laughed Margaret.

In those heated wards we

ll have a becoming flush.


One thing, I

ll be more acclimatized,

anticipated Jessa.

Crescent isn

t really tropical, but it

s warmer than here. You might find it hot, though.

But to herself Jessa doubted if Margaret would find any fault anywhere at any time. She was that rare person, a born nurse.

Another descent, and there was the roster. Matron Martha had been kind to her fledglings. Neither were expected on duty until tomorrow at eight o

clock.

The correspondence rack at the side of the roster brought a squeal of delight from Jessamine. Ba had remembered her in advance. She knew his writing. It looked like a greeting card. She tore it open, appreciating his forethought at posting it in time for her arrival.

To Mother on Mother

s Day,

she read aloud, and they both laughed.

They began a tour of the hospital and grounds. They peeped into the dining-room first, then the kitchen, the lounge. They walked around the lawns.


After tea we

ll explore the district,

suggested Margaret.

She looked at the clock-tower.

And tea will be in a quarter of an hour.


If time keeps going this quickly I

ll be back at Crescent before I know it,

said Jessa.

My course behind me and another certificate to hang on the wall.

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