Different Seasons(178)



I kept up with the literature on having babies more smartly than I did on that applying to any other area of general practice. And because my opinions were strong, enthusiastic ones, I wrote my own pamphlet rather than just passing along the stale chestnuts so often foisted on young mothers then. I won’t run through the whole catalogue of these chestnuts—we’d be here all night—but I’ll mention a couple.

Expectant mothers were urged to stay off their feet as much as possible, and on no account were they to walk any sustained distance lest a miscarriage or “birth damage” result. Now giving birth is an extremely strenuous piece of work, and such advice is like telling a football player to prepare for the big game by sitting around as much as possible so he won’t tire himself out! Another sterling piece of advice, given by a. good many doctors, was that moderately overweight mothers-to-be take up smoking ... smoking! The rationale was perfectly expressed by an advertising slogan of the day. “Have a Lucky instead of a sweet.” People who have the idea that when we entered the twentieth century we also entered an age of medical light and reason have no idea of how utterly crazy medicine could sometimes be. Perhaps it’s just as well; their hair would turn white.

I gave Miss Stansfield my folder and she looked through it with complete attention for perhaps five minutes. I asked her permission to smoke my pipe and she gave it absently, without looking up. When she did look up at last, there was a small smile on her lips. “Are you a radical, Dr. McCarron?” she asked.

“Why do you say that? Because I advise that the expectant mother should walk her round of errands instead of riding in a smoky, jolting subway car?”

“ ‘Pre-natal vitamins,’ whatever they are ... swimming recommended ... and breathing exercises! What breathing exercises?”

“That comes later on, and no—I’m not a radical. Far from it. What I am is five minutes’ overdue on my next patient.”

“Oh! I’m sorry.” She got to her feet quickly, tucking the thick folder into her purse.

“No need.”

She shrugged into her light coat, looking at me with those direct hazel eyes as she did so. “No,” she said. “Not a radical at all. I suspect you’re actually quite ... comfortable? Is that the word I want?”

“I hope it will serve,” I said. “It’s a word I like. If you speak to Mrs. Davidson, she’ll give you an appointment schedule. I’ll want to see you again early next month.”

“Your Mrs. Davidson doesn’t approve of me.”

“Oh, I’m sure that’s not true at all.” But I’ve never been a particularly good liar, and the warmth between us suddenly slipped away. I did not accompany her to the door of my consulting room. “Miss Stansfield?”

She turned toward me, coolly enquiring.

“Do you intend to keep the baby?”

She considered me briefly and then smiled—a secret smile which I am convinced only pregnant women know. “Oh yes,” she said, and let herself out.

By the end of that day I had treated identical twins for identical cases of poison ivy, lanced a boil, removed a hook of metal from a sheet-welder’s eye, and referred one of my oldest patients to White Memorial for what was surely cancer. I had forgotten all about Sandra Stansfield by then. Ella Davidson recalled her to my mind by saying:

“Perhaps she’s not a chippie after all.”

I looked up from my last patient’s folder. I had been looking at it, feeling that useless disgust most doctors feel when they know they have been rendered completely helpless, and thinking I ought to have a rubber stamp made up for such files—only instead of saying ACCOUNT RECEIVABLE OR PAID IN FULL OR PATIENT MOVED, it would simply say DEATH-WARRANT. Perhaps with a skull and crossbones above, like those on bottles of poison.

“Pardon me?”

“Your Miss Jane Smith. She did a most peculiar thing after her appointment this morning.” The set of Mrs. Davidson’s head and mouth made it clear that this was the sort of peculiar thing of which she approved.

“And what was that?”

“When I gave her her appointment card, she asked me to tot up her expenses. All of her expenses. Delivery and hospital stay included.”

That was a peculiar thing, all right. This was 1935, remember, and Miss Stansfield gave every impression of being a woman on her own. Was she well off, even comfortably off? I didn’t think so. Her dress, shoes, and gloves had all been smart, but she had worn no jewelry—not even costume jewelry. And then there was her hat, that decidedly out-of-date cloche.

“Did you do it?” I asked.

Mrs. Davidson looked at me as though I might have lost my senses. “Did I? Of course I did! And she paid the entire amount. In cash.”

The last, which apparently had surprised Mrs. Davidson the most (in an extremely pleasant way, of course), surprised me not at all. One thing which the Jane Smiths of the world can’t do is write checks.

“Took a bank-book out of her purse, opened it, and counted the money right out onto my desk,” Mrs. Davidson was continuing. “Then she put her receipt in where the cash had been, put the bank-book into her purse again, and said good day. Not half bad, when you think of the way we’ve had to chase some of these so-called ‘respectable’ people to make them pay their bills!”

I felt chagrined for some reason. I was not happy with the Stansfield woman for having done such a thing, with Mrs. Davidson for being so pleased and complacent with the arrangement, and with myself, for some reason I couldn’t define then and can’t now. Something about it made me feel small.

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