Matthew—no, Blake, since we were at work—looked the same as he always did. He was a better actor than I would have thought possible.
“There’s a British Medical Association divisional meeting this afternoon so I won’t be able to listen to this week’s presentations. You can choose between working on whatever assessment pieces are overdue, or sitting in on the meeting, which is where I’ll be.”
“What’s happened?” Lin said. “The division meeting isn’t due for another two months.”
I looked at her, impressed, and she coloured a little. “I joined last year,” she explained. “All the meetings are in the newsletter.”
“Excellent,” I said. “The rest of you, as soon as you can afford it, join the BMA. They’re the closest thing you have to a union, and when your employer tries to discipline you for doing the best you can for your patients, you’re going to need them.”
She leaned forward, elbows on the table, and said, “What’s happened? Is there something going on in the hospital to make a meeting necessary?”
“Okay, a reasonable point. One of the renal consultants couldn’t get the thoracic surgical team to assess one of his patients. They claimed they didn’t have space on their list to even consider it. So, after talking to his patient so she knew what he was doing, he changed her diagnosis to malignant tumours. Surgical team saw her instantly and complained bitterly about the consultant bypassing the system. The admin wants to discipline the doctor; we want the BMA in on it because the doctor was just doing his job in the best way he could.”
The students all stared at me, and I felt guilty for disillusioning them. “Who can tell me what the underlying issues are?”
Nevins was off in sexual fantasy heaven and I felt like grabbing him, shaking him, and shouting, “Do you think you’re the only one here that had sex last night? The rest of us are managing to concentrate!”
I waited.
Lin said, “The primary objective is patient care. If it takes deception to manipulate the bureaucracy and get that, what’s the problem?”
I waited, and said, “And?”
Blank looks.
“What about the surgical team?” I asked.
“By the first doctor misleading them and forcing them to divert resources that they couldn’t spare, it decreases their ability to provide care to their patients,” Lin said.
“And?”
Lin looked puzzled, and it was Nevins who looked up and said, “It says something about the hospital if it is that short of resources.”
I was stunned. Obviously a degree of critical thinking had been imparted by osmosis.
“Absolutely,” I said. “What occupancy rate does the hospital run at?”
It was a rhetorical question; I didn’t actually expect anyone to know.
“104%,” I said. “Yes, we manage to consistently run at significantly over capacity. If you ever meet Rina, the bed manager, ask her about it. She describes it as rearranging the deckchairs on the Titanic.”
“How?” Blake asked. “How does the hospital fill 104% of its beds?”
What the hell, it didn’t look like we were ever going to manage to do rounds today, so I might as well show them.
“Let’s go. Come and have a look at the dark underbelly of the hospital, see how many people can be packed into Casualty on a bad day.”
F was in the cafeteria at lunchtime and I took my burger over to join him. He was looking far more cheerful than I had expected from someone who’d had a new one ripped at an early morning meeting.
“How’s it going?” I asked.
“Fucking awful,” he said brightly. “But that’s all right. I typed up a letter of resignation and left it in the printer
’accidentally’ for a minute or two. That should help things.”
“I made my med students think about your problem. Then I took them to Casualty.”
He raised an eyebrow. “Really? Did it help?”
I shrugged. “Fuck knows.”
He smiled knowingly. “I looked it up. I’m impressed.”
“So was I,” I said.
Chapter Eleven
The meeting was mind-boggling. I sat down the back with Lin and watched in amazement as the Powers That Be went head to head with a bunch of angry doctors. There had been shouting, heated discussion of the standard employment contract the hospital used, and threats of industrial action.
Lin and I sat in rapt silence through this, though I must admit that I kept my eyes on Andrew most of the time. He was so passionate, speaking at one point about the obligations of practicing medicine, and the hospital’s abrogation of its duty of care, and I tried to reconcile this aspect of him with what I’d seen the night before. What he’d let me do. How good it had been.
Lin nudged me at one point, while Andrew was talking, and whispered, “You’ve got it bad for him, haven’t you?”
“Guess so,” I whispered back.
Fuck, I’d been so sure it had been a one-night stand; that we’d just fuck and that would be it, and I couldn’t quite believe that he’d asked me over for dinner, and that he was happy for me to study at his place. That implied something I hadn’t really had a chance to think about. Was it possible he wanted a relationship? That would explain him lending me his shirt, leaving me to let myself out of his house.
He was shouting now, standing up beside the doctor who had lied about his patient, the same man I’d seen him talking to in the bar the night before. I thought of what we’d seen that morning, where he’d taken us in the hospital. I guess at an intellectual level I’d known that parts of the National Health were in that bad a state, but it was a shock to actually see it.
It made me want to shout, too, and those patients weren’t my patients yet. They would be soon, either here or in another hospital, and I wasn’t sure how I’d cope.
The BMA lawyer interrupted one of the hospital’s lawyers and said, “This is at an impasse. I suggest we stop now, we’re not making headway.”
The doctor that had precipitated this mess, the one who looked like he was Andrew’s friend, stood up and called out,
“Drinks are on me, ten minutes, in the bar over the road.”
Andrew slapped him on the back and pushed his way through the doctors who were all standing up, talking at the top of their voices.
“Good to see you both here,” he said. “Join us at the bar?”
Lin said, “We’d love to,” and Andrew smiled at us briefly, then turned to speak with the person who was tapping on his shoulder.
Lin grinned at me in the lift. A couple of other doctors got in, too, so I was saved from whatever teasing Lin obviously had in mind.
She stayed for one drink only, then left, presumably to meet up with Nevins, leaving me leaning uncomfortably against the bar, listening to the BMA rep try and persuade me to buy a membership. I wanted to leave, but I really wanted to talk to Andrew first. I guess I was still uncertain that he actually wanted to see me again. Wasn’t much I could do about that right at that instant.
He walked past me while I was at the urinal, and I wanted to turn and look at him, but pissing with an apadravya requires a degree of concentration. There was a bang, bang, bang and when I looked over my shoulder, he was pushing open all the doors of the cubicles.
Oh, yeah.
I followed him into the end one.
This wasn’t a particularly classy bar; there were needle disposal units in each of the cubicles, but the wall that I found myself pressed up against was clean enough.
The kiss wasn’t clean, it was wet and demanding, and I clung onto Andrew and kissed him back as hard as I could.
Fuck, his hands were pulling at my chinos and I was hard in an instant, groaning as he stroked me and sucked on the skin of my neck.