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C
H A P T E R 1
Knolls Community Hospital,
settled within the autumn-dusted elegance of a Knolls
residential section, gave new arrivals the impression
of serenity with its pink granite two-story structure
and thick evergreen landscaping. The emergency and outpatient
areas formed a wing jutting out from the building westward,
looking like an arm reaching out to welcome patients
in. Two hundred fifty health-care personnel, food service
and housekeeping providers, and office workers earned
their living here. They gave quality care to up to sixty
patients on the floor. Family physicians offices
clustered close, circling the main structure in a large
section of acreage. The hospital administrator, Mrs.
Estelle Pinkley, ruled with the firm hand of a hardheaded,
hard-nosed grandmother, who almost everyone in the county
knew and loved.
Dr. Lukas Bower, the unwilling temporary
director of Knolls Emergency Department, depended on
Mrs. Pinkley to help him handle staff and make executive
decisions. In the meantime he took every opportunity
to convince her that he was a doctor, not an administrator.
If the future of Knolls Community Hospital depended
on his interdepartmental skills, the jobs of two hundred
fifty people stood in the shadow of death.
Today, however, the third Monday in
September, Lukas gave even less thought than usual to
paper work and verbal sparring. The ambulance radio
had just blared out the news of a bad accident involving
a car and a tour group down on the square. At least
five people, including the driver of the car, were being
brought in, several of them serious.
Lukas released the switch that had
sent his voice over the radio to the paramedic on scene
and turned with growing restlessness to locate his staff.
Judy, the slender secretary with short salt-and-pepper
hair, sat at the computer and spoke on the telephone
to a patient who had been treated and released last
night.
Lukas picked up his own phone at his
workstation at the large oblong central ER control counter
and dialed Surgery. He told the nurse to keep a surgery
suite open until he knew for sure if it would be needed.
He hung up and turned around to find Lauren McGaffrey,
RN, stepping back into the ER from an early lunch break.
Good. He needed her.
Lauren stopped to joke with one of
the housekeepers, peered over Judys shoulder to
see what was on the computer screen, then glanced over
at Lukas. She caught sight of his expression, and her
characteristic smile disappeared.
Whats up, Dr. Bower?
She hurriedly stashed her purse beneath the desk and
tied her long blond hair back into the ponytail she
wore for work.
Accident coming in, he
said. Several injuries. Apparently a group of
pedestrians took on a car with a drunk driver.
She nodded. Why does stuff like
this always happen at lunch-time? Ill go make
sure the trauma rooms are ready, and Ill break
out the gear for the staff.
Thanks, Lauren. Has Claudia gone
to lunch?
Yes, but she may be back in the
break room. I think she brought her lunch today.
Lauren smiled and shook her head as she turned and walked
toward the trauma rooms. Mrs. Pinkleys a
smart lady, she called over her shoulder. I
bet she knew double nursing coverage would increase
business.
Lukas looked over to find the secretary
off the phone. Judy, would you please call upstairs
for an extra nurse, and then contact Dr. Richmond. Shes
medical backup for today, and I need her.
You sure? Judy asked, peering
at him over her reading glasses. I talked to her
secretary a few minutes ago, and theyre up to
their eyeballs in walk-ins over there at the clinic.
Tell her Im sorry, but
it looks like we have some bad ones coming in.
He turned toward the trauma rooms to make sure Lauren
had all the gear the staff would need.
He knew Mercy Richmonds practice
was doing well, and he was glad for her. She had worked
hard for it, she was a caring doctor, and she deserved
a break after long years of struggle. He hated to over-whelm
her today. A busy Monday could keep her occupied long
after clinic hours were over.
Times like this were why Lukas needed
to hire more help, and he needed to do it as soon as
possible. The growth of this progressive Ozark town
of ten thousand would be reflected in the use of the
hospital. They had to be prepared, and like it or not,
the ER was his responsibility. The problem was, hed
never hired anyone before. Thanks to Mrs. Pinkleys
erroneous faith in him, he was jumping into the directorship
with both feet. He might drown.
So far Lukas was the first and only
full-time physician in this department. The family practice
docs affiliated with the hospital picked up hours on
nights and weekends, but they were getting tired of
the extra load, especially as the opportunities dwindled
for sleep during night shifts. Lukas knew that firsthand,
because when someone didnt come in, he usually
got stuck with the extra shift. Last night was a case
in point, and today was a bad day to be sleep deprived.
Dr. Bower, I have a call for
you, yelled Judy from the central desk.
When he turned to look at her, she
pointed toward his workstation and motioned for him
to pick up his phone. He groaned. It was probably Dorothy
Wild again. She got a power rush as director of the
quality assurance program, and she flaunted it at every
opportunity. Once, she had even gone so far as to coordinate
a disaster drill just to test Lukas. This time she was
probably calling to complain because he hadnt
okayed the stack of charts shed given him last
week. Or maybe Medical Records was calling to scream
at him because he hadnt written a diagnosis on
a patient before ordering lab tests.
Medicare and Medicaid and health plans
were making it harder to practice medicine with the
good of the patient in mind instead of the glorified
buck. Health-care providers often found themselves in
a Catch 22 situation. Doctors and hospitals were under
increasing pressure to eliminate unnecessary
tests, yet were provided no protection from litigation
if omission of one of these unnecessary
tests resulted in a missed diagnosis. It was crazy.
And medical costs were still on the rise. If Lukas were
in charge of the insurance programs, he wasnt
sure what he would do about it.
He picked up the receiver. Yes.
His voice was clipped as he imagined Dorothy Wild on
the other end of the line.
Doctor? It was an unfamiliar
womans voice, shaky with tears, and Lukas immediately
regretted his curt tone. Youve got to help
us. Our little boy just swallowed some stuff, and I
dont know how muchher words tumbled
over themselves, threatening to spiral out of controland
we dont know what to do, and were too far
away to
Hold it, wait, calm down.
Lukas kept his own voice low and calm. He glanced toward
the entrance to see if the ambulance had arrived yet.
The bay was still clear. He turned back. What
did your little boy swallow?
He heard the muffled sound of a hand
over the receiver, heard the womans panicky voice,
and then the sound cleared as the hand was removed.
A mans voice, high-pitched with
near panic, as well, came across the line. Hello?
This is Craig Chapman. My wifes not doing too
well right now. He stopped and took a breath.
I was winterizing the car out in the garage, and
our three-year-old drank some of the antifreeze while
my back was turned. It was dripping from his chin when
I caught him.
Some of Mr. Chapmans tension
transferred itself to Lukas. This could be bad. Do
you have any idea about how much he swallowed?
No. I hadnt used the stuff
for a few months, and I didnt pay any attention.
I tried to get him to throw it up, but nothing worked.
Where do you live Lukas
asked.
Were out by Old Well. Youre
the closest hospital.
Lukas grimaced. Old Well was almost
an hours drive into the hills over rocky dirt
roads.
What can we de Mr. Chapman
asked, panic once more filling his voice. Will
this stuff hurt him?
It depends on how much he drank,
Mr. Chapman. I need you and your wife to stay calm so
we can discuss this and help your son as quickly as
possible. Old Well...what was it Lukas remembered
about that place? Do you have any liquor in the
house?
No, we dont drink.
How about your neighbor? Are
you close to a liquor store?
We dont know our neighbors
around here yet. We just moved in from Kansas.
The mans voice grew tighter and higher. Tell
me what to do!
Do you have any cooking extracts?
Any vanilla? If there was enough, vanilla extract
could save the childs eyesight due to the high
percentage of alcohol. It could even save his life.
He heard the man put the phone down
and ask his wife, heard her frantic reply and a small
clatter of bottles, and then suddenly remembered who
else lived near Old Well. Yes!
Chapman came back on the line. Weve
just got half of a little bottle of vanilla, Doctor.
Is that enough? Will that help?
Give it to him, but youll
need more.
Hes not showing any symptoms
yet. He isnt acting sick.
The symptoms wont show
up for twelve to twenty-four hours. And then it
would be too late. Mr. Chapman, do you know Emmet
and Ruby Taylor? They live out in the hills near you
at the edge of Mark Twain National Forest, about two
miles from the cemetery by the church at Old Well.
He should know. Ruby Taylor had almost died of lead
poisoning from her still a few months ago. The still
had been destroyed since then, but Lukas knew Ruby.
Take your son over to their place. Tell them I
sent you, and ask for a bottle of their best. Theyll
have liquor somewhere. He prayed that the Taylors
were there. They usually were, with their teenaged boys
and dairy farm, pigs and chickens, and rusted-out tireless
cars sitting in the front yard.
You want me to get my little
boy drunk? Chapman asked, a hint of indignation
in his voice, as if it had suddenly dawned on him what
Lukas was saying.
I want you to get enough grain
alcohol down him to counteract the effects of the antifreeze,
Lukas said. About three tablespoons of Rubys
stuff ought to do it, but you dont want to underdose
him, especially since we dont know how much hes
ingested. Mix some orange juice or something with it
so hell drink it. Maybe some sugar will kill the
taste. Then get him here as fast as you can.
Wont the alcohol interfere
with the antidote?
In this case, the alcohol is
the antidote. Mr. Chapman, the effects can kill him
if you dont treat. He didnt want to
be cruel, but the man needed to be aware of the serious
risks. The sound of a siren echoed through the doors,
then the reflection of ambulance lights bounced against
the bay entrance. Are you okay with that?
Yeah, Doctor. Well get
him there.
Good. Ill see you then.
Lukas hung up and got up to walk out
to the ambulance bay just as the EMT threw open the
back doors of the van. He stepped over to the foot of
the first cot that was pulled out.
The patient was a female in a nonrebreather
mask, fully immobilized on a long spine backboard with
head blocks. She had a large bore IV in her right arm,
and blood splattered her clothing. Blood also concentrated
in a dark, thick stain that had seeped through a bandage
over her right lower leg, where her jeans had been cut
free, and a Harris long traction splint held firm.
Is this the worst? Lukas
asked.
Sure is. She looks pretty bad.
The EMT gestured to the other patient, who was still
inside the van. Thats her husband in there.
Lukas didnt like the looks of
the patients right footalmost white from
lack of circulation. She moaned, but her eyes remained
closed.
The paramedic stepped out of the back
of the van. Connie was a muscular, seasoned professional
with short boy-cut blond hair and a chronically serious
expression. Hi, Dr. Bower. This is Alma Collins,
forty-five years old. First responders had to free her
from between the car and the concrete balustrade of
the courthouse. Her voice remained monotone, a
habit she practiced when she worked with patients to
keep from alarming them. She was unconscious on
scene, but shes been coming around since weve
been en route, and shes in a lot of pain. She
has an obvious open tib-fib fracture, badly mangled
leg, no pulse on the foot. Vitals initially on scene,
heart rate 115, BP 90 over 60, respiratory rate rapid,
with slight improvement following a liter bag of normal
saline wide open. Shes received 700 ccs
so far. A lot of bleeding on scene from right lower
extremity, but we managed to control it some after we
placed the splint.
What about the other patient?
Lukas gestured toward the cot still in the van.
Thats Arthur Collins, the
husband, Connie said. He has a deep scalp
laceration, and it looks like he may have a dislocated
or broken right shoulder. He lost a lot of blood from
the scalp, but its been controlled by direct pressure.
Lukas reached forward to check Alma
more thoroughly while he continued to talk to Connie.
What else is coming?
Two more are on their way in
the BLS ambulance, and ones coming in by private
car.
Lukas placed his hands over the sides
of Almas hips and gave a gentle but firm squeeze.
There was no reaction of pain. Good. He would get a
film on it, but if she didnt have a pelvic fracture,
it would be a lot easier for her. As Connie continued
with the report, Lukas helped her rush the patient through
the doors and into the first trauma room, leaving the
EMT and ER tech to handle Almas injured husband.
Judy, get a chopper on standby,
he called over his shoulder as he and Connie transferred
Alma to the exam bed. And let Lab know weve
got stat blood work for them. He turned to Lauren,
who had come in behind them. Start another IV,
and draw blood for a stat trauma panel.
Almas pupils reacted briskly,
and her breathing, though a little fast, was even. Her
eyes remained open after he checked them. She moaned
again, and Lukas bent toward her. Mrs. Collins,
Im Dr. Bower, the ER physician here. Because
Connies businesslike manner could sometimes make
a patient feel cut off from human support, he injected
even more tenderness than usual into his own voice.
Can you hear me?
Physical pain etched itself in the
lines of the womans face. Her eyes filled with
tears. Yes...hurts bad...can you help me?
Yes. Im sorry, but I need
to do a quick check and ask you some questions. Do you
have any drug allergies?
She attempted to shake her head.
Please dont move your head
or neck until we know how badly youre hurt. Just
tell me yes or no.
No. Her voice shook with
the effort to control her reactions.
Good. I know your right leg hurts.
Do you have pain anywhere else?
My head. Her chin quivered.
I think I hit my head.
Were you knocked out?
I think so. Arthur? She
stretched out the fingers of her right hand as if to
free herself, but she was constricted by the backboard.
Wheres Arthur? Is he okay?
I havent checked him, but
he seems to be doing okay. Do you hurt anywhere else?
I cant tell. She
grimaced. My leg hurts so bad. Please!
Lukas turned to find Lauren securing
the second IV tube with tape. Get me a pressure,
and if thats okay, give Mrs. Collins 2 milligrams
of morphine, slow IV push. And add 12.5 milligrams of
Phenergan. I dont want to risk the morphine nauseating
her. He looked at the open tib-fib fracture just
below the knee, then moved down to look at Almas
right foot. He still didnt like what he saw. It
was cool to the touch, white, and when he checked for
a pulse on top of the foot, he found none. The capillary
refill was very sluggish. He had to get this woman to
a vascular surgeon fast if he wanted to save her leg.
Lord, guide me. Touch her through me.
Give her the comfort I cant.
He stepped to the hallway and called,
Judy, launch that chopper, then order me a c-spine,
chest, pelvis, and right tib-fib and ankle x-rays. Have
you heard from Dr. Richmond yet?
Yes, shell be here shortly.
She said she had to finish with a really sick patient.
Lauren straightened from Almas
bedside. Dr. Bower, the pressures good.
Want me to do the morphine?
Yes. Run the second IV at 200
ccs per hour. I want her kidneys well hydrated
to prevent damage. Ill be back in a moment. I
need to go check on her husband. He called out
to Claudia to help him and stepped into the next room,
where the techs and Connie were transferring Arthur
from cot to bed.
Arthur, too, was on a long spine board,
with a c-collar and head blocks to keep him as immobile
as possible. Blood had seeped through the gauze and
Ace bandage the attendants had used to stop the bleeding
from an obvious scalp laceration.
Claudia, chunky and motherly and expert
with patients, stepped into the room behind Lukas and
immediately began her assessment while Lukas talked
to the attendants.
Connie, you said there was a
lot of blood loss. How much would you estimate?
At least a unit, maybe two
came the paramedics monotone again. The
first responders said he wasnt answering their
questions, but when we arrived he was alert and oriented
and asking about his wife. He grew very agitated when
he saw her leg. His pressure was a little low, but it
came up with a fluid bolus.
Claudia turned from her assessment
and nodded. BPs 122 over 79, heart rates
110.
Lukas nodded. Not bad. Okay,
get me a second IV. He stepped to the head of
the bed and introduced himself to Arthur Collins.
Hows Alma? the man
asked. My wife...she looks so bad. Shes
Shes very worried about
you, Lukas said. Weve given her morphine
to help control her pain, and were running tests
now to assess her injuries. How about you, Mr. Collins?
Where do you hurt?
The man closed his eyes for a moment,
as if trying to focus for a few seconds on his own symptoms.
Call me Arthur. Were Arthur and Alma. My
right shoulder and my scalp took a beating, but please
take care of Alma first. Her leg looks so bad, Dr. Bower.
Can you help her?
Were going to fly her to
Springfield for vascular and orthopedic surgeons to
take care of her. Ive already ordered an Air Care
helicopter. Lukas took out his penlight. Im
going to check your pupils right now. He shone
the light into the mans worried eyes. Are
you having any trouble with blurred vision?
No.
Nausea or vomiting?
No. When will the helicopter
be here?
Lukas turned off the light and put
it in his pocket. Shouldnt be too long,
less than thirty minutes. Arthur, its very important
that I know if youre having any nausea. We have
you strapped down and on your back, and that can spell
trouble if youre sick. We dont want to risk
letting you develop aspiration pneumonia.
I had a little trouble before
I got here, but Im fine now.
Lukas studied the mans
expression for a moment, trying to decide if he was
just trying to divert help and attention back to his
wife.
Have you eaten?
No, Alma and I didnt get
a chance. Where are you taking her in Springfield?
Cox South, unless you have a
preference.
Cox is fine. Is there room for
me in that helicopter?
Im sorry, Arthur, but well
need to keep you here for a while.
Lukas turned to Claudia and ordered
blood work and x-rays. Are the other patients
here yet?
Yes, they came in just a couple
of minutes ago. Lauren didnt want to leave Alma,
so a nurse from upstairs is doing the new assessments.
They dont look too bad. She leaned toward
the patient and placed a hand on his uninjured shoulder.
Mr. Collins, the people from your tour group are
here, and they asked us to tell you theyre holding
a prayer service out in the waiting room.
Some of the tension left Arthurs
face, and he sent her a grateful half smile. Thank
you. Will you tell Alma? And, Dr. Bower, will you let
her know Im fine? She worries about me so much.
Apparently the feeling is mutual.
Ill reassure her. Lukas squeezed Arthurs
arm, then went back into trauma one to find the x-ray
tech setting up films, and Lauren taking Almas
blood pressure again.
Shes doing better, Dr.
Bower. Lauren glanced at the clear plastic bag
hanging from the IV pole. But shes still
in a lot of pain. Her blood pressure is okay, and shes
responsive. The liter of fluid is almost in.
Cut her rate down to 50 ccs
per hourjust enough to keep the IV open. Thatll
hold her until she gets to Springfield. Keep the second
IV at 200 ccs per hour.
The x-ray tech slid a cartridge into
the Stryker bed, which was a newly purchased, state-of-the-art
setup for the trauma room. Dr. Bower, Im
ready to shoot.
Lukas and Lauren stepped out of the
room while the tech shot the films, and from the hallway
they could see the bustle and activity of a suddenly
full waiting room and ambulance bay. As Claudia had
said, a group of casually dressed people stood in a
circle in the corner of the waiting room and held hands,
heads bowed.
The EMT from the Collinses ambulance
passed by them in the broad hallway, saw Lukas, and
stopped. They brought in the drunk driver who
hit everybody, Dr. Bower. Hes crying, talking
to everybody who walks by, but nobody knows what hes
saying. Sounds like hes speaking Spanish. The
police are here, and theyre itching to haul him
in. Theyre really ticked.
Lukas shook his head. They cant
have him until weve checked him out, and thatll
be a few minutes. Well need an interpreter. Ill
ask Judy to call one in. He turned to Lauren.
Repeat Almas morphine dose, two milligrams
every five minutes, and let me know if her pressure
drops or if she develops depressed respirations. And
tell her Arthur is okay.
Lauren nodded. Ill reassure
her.
The tech left the room, pushing the
portable x-ray machine.
As Lauren went back in to recheck Alma,
Lukas walked to the central desk. Judy, would
you please call a Spanish interpreter?
Did it already, Judy said
without looking up from her keyboard.
He reached into a drawer and drew out
a consent form for Arthur to sign so they could transfer
Alma. Has the chopper called yet?
Judys fingers still didnt
break stride. No, but I should hear from them
anytime.
When they call, let them know
her vitals are stable, but she has a class-one limb
threat to her right lower extremity.
No answer. The sound of the clattering
keyboard stilled suddenly.
He glanced up to find the secretary
staring toward the entrance, and when he looked, he
saw Jacob CaseyCowboy to most of the citizens
of Knollscome stumbling through the glass doors,
aided by an older man in bib overalls. Somewhere, Cowboy
had lost his hat.
Oh no, not again, Judy
said softly.
Lanky, weathered Cowboy was such a
frequent visitor in this ER, Lukas wondered how the
forty-three-year-old man had survived his occupation.
Hed been kicked, gouged, bitten, and knocked senseless
on that exotic animal ranch of hishe believed
in personal contact with his bison, zebras, lions, and
whatever else he raised on his three hundred acres of
reinforced paddocks. Scars on several areas of his hard-bodied
frame attested to his dedication.
Today blood covered Cowboys upper
right arm and splattered his chest and back. The left
arm of his long-sleeved denim shirt had been ripped
off and tied over his upper right arm in a crude attempt
at a pressure dressing.
Lukas pushed back from the desk and
got up to help. Cowboy, what happened this time?
He took a closer look at what appeared, surprisingly,
to be a bullet wound. Has Leonardo started bearing
arms? Everybody knew the rancher wouldnt
touch a gun.
Cowboy shook his head as he allowed
his helper to transfer his leaning weight to Lukas.
The neighbor shot him,
the farmer said. He chased Cowboy clear out of
the woods into my field with a rifle. I saw it myself.
Didnt take the time to call the sheriff. Guess
we oughta call him now, huh, Doc?
No need, the police are already
here doing an accident report. Would you please go tell
them about this? Theyll want to check it out and
take your statement.
The man nodded, then patted Cowboy
on his bare good arm. Dont you worry, Jake,
Ill take care of it.
Lukas helped Cowboy to exam room five.
How many times did the guy shoot you?
Once. Cowboy grunted as
Lukas lowered him to sit on the bed. Lost some
blood. The guys crazy.
Is that the one who moved onto
that farm next to yours, then started complaining about
the smell of the animals? I heard about him. Lukas
removed his patients shirt and then helped him
lie back. How much blood do you think you lost?
Maybe a pint. Cowboys
deep voice thickened with pain as the shirt came off
No time to measure.
Lukas stepped out into the hallway
and called for a nurse, then returned to the bedside.
He made a quick check of airway, breathing, and circulation,
then listened to Cowboys heart. Not bad, a little
fast, but understandable under the circumstances. The
left wrist had a strong pulse, and the fingers were
warm and healthy.
When the relief nurse from upstairs
stepped into the room, Lukas gave immediate orders for
an IV and a trauma panel, then repeated his check on
Cowboy, this time on the arm that had been shot. To
his relief, it looked good. Okay, Jake, Ill
regret this, but give my hand a firm squeeze.
He braced himself for the mans well-known iron
grip, but it didnt come.
Cowboy grimaced again, the lines of
his face deepening as his color faded. Hurts to
squeeze. Is it bad?
Not as bad as it could have been.
Lukas pulled on a pair of sterile gloves and reached
for a packet of 4x4s. He removed the make-shift bandage
and saw no active bleeding. He found the entrance and
exit wounds. What did he shoot you with?
Looked like a .22 rifle, almost
point-blank. Just up and shot me in cold blood, the
same way he did
A young steel-faced policeman pulled
back the curtain and stepped into the room. Dr.
Bower? Do you mind if we interrupt? The sooner we talk
to Cowboy, the faster well be on the guys
trail.
Judy came in behind the policeman.
Dr. Bower, we just got a call from the fire department.
Theyre bringing in two more patients.
Lukas shook his head in frustration.
The day was exploding like popcorn in a microwave. Why
did everything have to happen at once?
The secretary continued. The
nurse with Air Care just radioed us, and theyll
be here in a few minutes to pick up Mrs. Collins.
Thanks, Judy. Lukas ripped
open one of the sterile packs of 4x4s and a roll of
elastic gauze, then regloved and dressed the wound.
He looked over at the policeman. Officer, you
can do your interview now. Looks like Ill have
my hands full. He turned and followed the secretary
out of the room. Judy, I need a right shoulder
x-ray in five, and hes going to need a surgical
consult. Is Dr. Wong on call? He usually is when Cowboy
gets hurt.
Yes, Dr. Wongs the lucky
guy today. Judy grinned at him. Cowboy wont
want a surgeon, he never does. Dr. Mercy will be here
soon. Her expression turned serious. One
of the patients theyre bringing in is our part-time
EMT, Buck Oppenheimer. He got hurt in a fire.
Buck! How bad?
Havent heard yet. There
was an explosion at the Quick Stop out by P Highway,
and his buddies are bringing him in so he wont
have to wait for an ambulance. I sure hope hes
okay, and I hope his wife doesnt kill him when
she finds out he played hero again.
Lukas nodded, then went in to check
on Alma again and read her x-rays. There were no pneumo-thorax
or rib or pelvis fractures, but the x-ray of her right
tib-fib confirmed his worst fears. Both bones of the
lower leg were shattered. If the blood vessels and nerves
were as badly damaged as the bone, they would be doing
an amputation in Springfield instead of a vascular and
orthopedic repair.
Someone cried out in Spanish in one
of the rooms, and Lukas hoped the interpreter would
arrive soon. That patient was the one who reportedly
drove the car into Arthur and Almas tour group.
One of the most frustrating things
in emergency medicine was treating those responsible
for the pain and suffering of othersand one of
the most difficult things to do was to have compassion
for everyone involved.
Lord, give me strength
and wisdom. Give Alma and Arthur your peace, and use
me as a vessel of healing. And, Lord, would you please
slow things down a little?
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