Swings and Roundabouts for Mike
Uncle Mike’s first night in
hospital felt like a giant game of pass the parcel. He was shipped from
emergency room, to X-ray, to intensive care, and back to X-ray again. Even
though the doctors were all being very nice, Mike could feel the nervousness in
the air. Mike was strapped to his bed by so many restraining straps, he
felt like Gulliver, in the land of Lilliput. Mike’s eyelids had just
closed for a few moments, when the breakfast trolley woke him up,
again. No wonder there was so many sick people in hospital, thought Mike, no
one could get a wink of sleep.
"Hey, nurse. Any chance of a cup
of tea?"
"Sorry Mike, we can’t give you
anything, until the surgeon has been to see you," she said, giving
breakfast to the guy in the next bed. The smell was torture, he was starving, but
he was always starving.
"Go on. A sneaky cup of tea, no
one will know," Mike said, winking, and wiggling his fingers at her.
"Would you stop it," she
said, slapping his fingers, but giving him a little smile. He still didn't get
any tea. A little after ten, a tall doctor in his fifties arrived, with a load
of younger doctors trailing behind him. He looked like a mammy duck leading her
ducklings to water. Mike could see him outside the ward speaking to his group.
After a few minutes, the tall doctor came in alone, leaving all his little
ducklings clustered around the door.
"Good morning, Mr Beagly. I'm
Kenny O'Regan, your consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon."
"That's mighty, Doc, I didn't even
know I had an orthopaedic. Did I break it?"
The surgeon laughed, "Actually you
did, Mr Beagly."
"Call me Mike, Doc," he said.
"I would shake hands, but I am a bit tied up."
"It's great to keep a sense of
humour, Mike, but this situation is very serious. By some miracle you have
avoided any major damage to internal organs, but your spine has been
fractured along your fifth thoracic vertebrae. You have been very lucky,
actually. It’s a compression fracture which has not dislocated, but still
might. The long and short of it is this, one jolt or movement in the wrong
direction, and you may never walk again."
"So, you’re telling me, I'll
be fine."
"I didn’t say that, Mike, but it
could be a hell of a lot worse. You’re not out of the woods, yet. We need to
move you to a special unit in Dublin."
"No way, Doc, why can’t you look
after me here? Dublin is too far from Rita and the kids."
"Your treatment is too complex,
Mike."
"I really don't want to go,
Doctor, and anyway, going all that way in an ambulance will kill me. I think I
would be better off, staying where I am."
"You're going nowhere by
ambulance, Mike. We'll be sending you by helicopter."
Only for the fact he was tied to the
bed, Mike would have shot straight out of it. "A chopper, are you
serious?"
Doctor O'Regan laughed, "Of course
I am, Mike."
A frown creased Mike's forehead,
"Do I have to pay for it?"
"No Mike, it’s on the house. Are
you up for a trip, so?"
"Count me in, Doc, are we going
now?"
"Not just yet, Mike. Do you mind
if my students come and review the details of your case? We don't often get
cases like yours, plenty of broken bones, but you're a little special."
"No problem, Doc. I am well used
to teaching youngsters a thing or two." Dr O'Regan beckoned to the group,
and they filed into the room, surrounding the bed.
Uncle Mike took them all in,
giving them a huge grin. "Jesus, lads, would you crack a
smile," he said to the group, "or I’ll think ‘tis a wake you've come
for." Uncle Mike pointed a finger in the direction of a tall ginger-haired
intern. "Hey, freckles, are you one of the Cunninghams?" The young
doctor blushed, as the rest of the group laughed at him.
"No, Mr Begley, My name is Sweeney."
"There is a breed of a Cunningham
in you. You’re the spitting head of them."
"I assure you, I am all
Sweeney," said the mortified young man, his face as red as his hair.
"Fair enough," said Mike,
turning his attention to the group in general. "What do you lot want to
know, first?"
The trainee doctors again gave a little
sniggered, again, Doctor O'Regan turned to Mike, "Why don't I get them
started?"
"Fair enough Doc, give me a shout
if you get stuck on anything." More laughter flowed from the gathered
students.
It was later that afternoon when
they came to get Mike ready for his trip to Dublin. Once again strapped
to a backboard, he was wheeled out to the car park, when
the helicopter was due to arrive. Rita was there, to see him off. Two
orderlies and a nurse were also alongside, to help with the loading.
"Do you think they will fly over
the house, Rita?"
"Why don't you ask them?"
"I’d love to have a go at flying
one. Hey - I think I can hear it coming. Can you see it, Rita?"
"It's off over there," Rita
said, pointing behind Mike’s head.
"Hey, hey, hey, lads, will you
twist me around, so I can have a look at it?"
The orderlies pushed Mike’s bed in a
circle, making the nurse that was holding his drip go with them.
The problem was, while Mike was making a circle, the helicopter was
circling, as well.
"Keep going, you nearly had
him," encouraged Mike, as the whole team danced a merry circle
in the middle of the car park. Eventually both the massive Sea King Helicopter,
and Mike’s trolley, came to a rest.
"Sweet baby Jesus, look at the
size of the thing," Mike gasped. "How the feck can it stay up in the
air?"
"You're not getting nervous,
Mike?" asked one of the orderlies.
"Not on your nelly, lads, get me
hooked up and let’s get going."
The nurse smiled at Rita, as Mike was
being strapped into the back of the helicopter. "It's a blessing, if you
ask me," she said, rather cryptically.
"What is?" asked Rita.
"Being a little innocent,"
she said, nodding towards Mike, wiggling his fingers and smiling wildly
"There he is, perhaps never to walk again, and all he can think about,
is taking a ride in a helicopter."
Rita smiled, and said, "You could
be right," wondering to herself whether the pot was calling
the kettle black.
The orderlies and the chopper crew settled
Mike in, while Rita and the nurse watched on from a safe distance. After a
few minutes, Mike’s voice rose above the high pitched whine of the aircraft
engine. "Rita!" Not many voices could be heard above the whirring Rolls
Royce Engine, but Mike managed.
"What is it, Mike?"
"The driver fella said he will
swing by the house, on the way to Dublin. Will you ring the kids and tell them
to be looking out for us?"
"Okay, Mike," said Rita.
"Tell them to take a photo for the
album."
"I will, Mike. I’ll see you on the
weekend," said Rita, leaning in to give him a kiss. She couldn’t help but
feel a little queasy, at the thought of him being up in the air in this thing.
It was insane, but the nurse might be right. There he was, broken back,
good chance of being crippled for life, small chance of dying in a huge ball of
flames, and Mike was the happiest she could ever remember seeing him.
"Don't worry girl, I will be right
as rain in a few days," Mike said, as they closed the sliding doors, and
the engine began to build in pitch. Rita and the hospital crew retreated, as
the blades of the helicopter began to whir through the air. Before the wheels
left the ground, the noise was deafening. The huge machine inched into the sky,
twisting away into the evening sunset.
***
True to his word, the captain of
the coastguard helicopter diverted over Killblany, but the picture
was never captured. Back in those days, it took longer for Rita to reach a
phone, than it took the helicopter to reach Killblany. The kids actually
did hear it, and even saw the huge red and white aircraft hovering over the
house, before peeling off to the north east. If only they knew their father was
in it, waving his fingers at them. The flight from Cork to Dublin only lasted
about forty minutes, but it was a highlight of Uncle Mike’s life. In direct
comparison, the next three months were some of the hardest days he ever faced.
When Mike arrived at the Rehabilitation
Centre, he was prodded and poked for hours. Eventually he was strapped into a
huge circler bed. It rotated constantly. For the first few days, Mike couldn't
sleep, between the pain and the constant movement, it was agony. On the third
day, exhaustion took over, and Mike passed out. Round and round and round Mike
went, never stopping, except for more poking and prodding.
A sour faced old matron ruled the ward
with an iron fist. Mike called her, “Sister Tank”, as he could feel her
coming, long before he saw her. Back in those days, patients were allowed to
smoke on the wards. Mike was very fond of his fags, as was the guy in the bed
to his left. His skinny neighbour was a spotty-faced joy rider. Mike was glad this
little runt was more or less, confined to his wheelchair. Otherwise, nothing
would have been safe from his sticky fingers. The joy rider had
crashed a car into a street lamp, while being chased by seven
squad cars. He was on his way home from a night of ram raiding, when he bumped
into a copper’s roadblock. He was very proud of the fact it took
seven squads to corner him, and told Mike on several occasions, that if he
had not swerved to avoid that dog, it would have taken another ten. The wreck
left him paralysed from the chest down, and shaky from the chest up. The
man in the bed to Mike's right was even worse, six hours a day he had
to inhale pure oxygen, or he would just pass out. During these times, no
one on the ward was allowed smoke.
A few weeks in, it all got too much for
the joy rider, he drove at the man in the right hand bed with a flaming lighter
in his shaking hand, and cursing with the lack of nicotine.
"Hey, you maniac, you'll blow the
whole fecking place up," Mike said, but the joy rider advanced on
the oxygen tent like some demented, shuddering, suicide bomber.
"Sister,
sister, SISTER!" yelled Mike.
Nurse tank managed to turn off the
manic joy rider’s chair, just on the point of mass destruction.
She lashed the Dublin byo, with the sharpest edge of her tongue.
"Smoking is doing none of you
any good, and is a filthy habit," was her parting shot.
Later that day, Uncle Mike
was having a particularly uncomfortable time, he was given extra
pain medication which helped him sleep. Mike came round in
the early hours of the morning. Anyone that has ever smoked will
understand that one of the first things that crosses a smokers mind
when they wake up, is having a smoke. Uncle Mike was no different.
As unhappy circumstances would have it Mike’s bed was rotating away from
his bedside locker, when he woke. Mike waited and waited until the bed came
around and lined up with his locker again. Mike groped in the drawer,
but his fingers couldn’t find the cigarettes. He searched with blind
fingers but before he could find the cigarette box, his fingers were
dragged away by the rotating bed.
Mike had to wait an agonising hour
before the bed again reached the bedside table. This time Mike wasn’t
going to be outdone. He stretched as far as he could and delved his hand
into the drawer’s depths. He just could not find his fags. As the bed began to
rotate away Mikes sleeve got caught on drawer knob. Mike pulled, but this
only got him more entangled. Mike felt the drag across the chest increase, as
the weight of the bedside locker dragged on his pyjamas. In a sicking
moment, the locker left the ground bringing with it the bedside light, water
jug and bottles of Lucozade left by visiting relatives. The crashing of glass
bottles brought sister Tank running down the corridor.
"Mr Beagley, what is going on
here?" cried sister tank, from the door.
Uncle Mike twirled through the air
entwined with the bedside locker. What could he say to explain what had
happened besides the truth. "Just looking for my fag's sister."
It took a good twenty minutes to get
the room back to normal. After the near firebombing and attempted destruction
of a ward, it came as no surprise when Sister Tank confiscated all cigarettes,
issuing them to the patents one at a time after meals. Only my Uncle Mike could
cause so much trouble, while completely strapped to a bed.
You can get all of Uncle Mike's story in one place, along with the combined tales of Father Tom. Hope you enjoy them.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Misadventures-Father-Squid-McFinnigan-ebook/dp/B01AGW4PU2
You can get all of Uncle Mike's story in one place, along with the combined tales of Father Tom. Hope you enjoy them.
http://www.amazon.com/The-Misadventures-Father-Squid-McFinnigan-ebook/dp/B01AGW4PU2