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    Betty Neels - Damsel In Green.txt


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      DAMSEL IN GREEN [070-066-4.8]

      By: BETTY NE ELS

      Synopsis:

      A Classic Romantic Novel

      Dear Reader,

      Looking back over the years, I find it hard to realise that twenty-six of

      them have gone by since I wrote my first book--Sister Peters in Amsterdam.

      It wasn't until I started writing about her that I found that once I had

      started writing, nothing was going to make me stop--and at that time I had no

      intention of sending it to a publisher. It was my daughter who urged me to

      try my luck.

      I shall never forget the thrill of having my first book accepted. A thrill I

      still get each time a new story is accepted. Writing to me is such a

      pleasure, and seeing a story unfolding on my old typewriter is like watching

      a film and wondering how it will end. Happily of course.

      To have so many of my books re-published is such a delightful thing to happen

      and I can only hope that those who read them will share my pleasure in seeing

      them on the bookshelves again. and enjoy reading them.

      DAMSEL IN GREEN

      By: BETTY NE ELS

      CHAPTER ONE

      the church clock across the street chimed the half hour, and Miss Georgina

      Rodman, already walking down the corridor leading to Casualty, put on a

      sudden desperate turn of speed. There was a chance--a faint one--that she

      might arrive on duty before Staff Nurse Gregg; if she didn't, it would mean

      the third time late on duty in a week, and Gregg would probably report her to

      Sister. It would be of no use making excuses, for Gregg never needed to make

      excuses for herself, and couldn't understand why anyone else should either.

      Nurse Rodman wasted precious breath on a sigh as she ran, for her excuses

      were good ones-on Monday it had been the ward maid falling downstairs with

      that large part of porridge; the porridge hadn't been hot, but extremely

      sticky;

      thinking about it, Georgina couldn't see how she could have ignored the

      girl's cries for help. She had been late on Thursday too, when she had met a

      rather down-trodden old lady who had been told to attend for a barium meal at

      seven-thirty in the morning, and didn't know where to go. It had only taken

      a very short time to walk with her to X-Ray--just long enough for Staff Nurse

      to remark triumphantly:

      "Late again. Nurse! You should know better-how can you hope to set a good

      example to the juniors? And you waiting for the results of your Finals!"

      Her tone had implied that Georgina need not expect good news. And now it was

      Saturday, and she was late again, for she had stopped to ask Payne the head

      porter how his wife was feeling;

      the poor soul had been ill for weeks, and Payne had been looking sad.

      She pulled up outside Cas swing doors and drew a breath. It was a pity that

      life didn't allow you time to dawdle a little on the way. She opened the

      doors, to find Staff Nurse Gregg waiting for her--doing the dispensary, of

      course, because that was her particular job in the mornings; but she had

      dragged the basket into the centre of the room so that she wouldn't miss

      Georgina.

      She looked pained.

      "Late again. Nurse Rodman--the third time this week. I shall have to report

      you to Sister--there might have been a terrific emergency on."

      Georgina said, "Yes, Staff because it was expected of her, and went to

      twiddle the knobs of the sterilizers in an expert way and count the packets

      of dressings and instruments CSD had just sent down. The two junior nurses

      had already prepared the cubicles for the day. She slipped quietly in and

      out of them, making sure that everything was just so. The first contained a

      tired-looking boy, a bare, grubby foot on the stool before him, clutching his

      shoe and sock.

      "Trodden on a rusty nail?" asked Georgina in a friendly voice. She was

      already busy cleaning it up.

      "How did you know?" asked the boy.

      "We get a great many--it's a common accident. It'll be fine in a day or

      two--you won't need to stop work, but I'll have to give you an injection."

      She gave him a nice wide smile and went to find Staff. She wasn't a trained

      nurse yet--she couldn't give ATS without getting permission. Gregg gave it

      with the air of conferring a great honour.

      "Why didn't you leave the boy? It's nothing urgent," she wanted to know.

      "He's on night work, it would be a shame to keep him from his bed."

      Staff frowned.

      "You'll never make a good nurse," she grumbled, 'you're so impetuous. "

      Georgina gave the injection, wondering why she was impetuous. Surely it was

      plain common sense to clear the cubicles of the minor cases as quickly as

      possible, otherwise there would be such a bottleneck later on in the morning.

      She wrote up the boy's card, filled in the day book, tidied up neatly and

      went into the last cubicle. Both nurses were in it, as she had guessed they

      would be. They grinned cheerfully at her, and the youngest and prettiest

      said.

      "Oh, George, isn't she in a foul mood?"

      Georgina grinned back.

      "It'll be worse if you don't get a porter to change the oxygen in Two.. and

      there aren't any dressings in Four."

      There was a hurried movement for the door and she added, "I've seen to the

      dressings, but it'll look better if you report the oxygen."

      They stopped at the door.

      "George," said the nurse who had forgotten the dressings, 'we wish you were

      staff. "

      "That's nice of you both, but I expect I've failed my State, you know."

      She turned to the tiny mirror on the wall to straighten her cap. She had

      fine, silky hair, and the cap needed a great many pins to keep it at a

      dignified angle. It was pretty hair, too, light brown and long, and she

      screwed it up into a severe plaited knob at the back because it was quick to

      do and stayed tidy that way. She looked at herself in the little square of

      glass while she replanted some pins. The face that looked back at her was a

      good-looking one; not pretty--the nose was a trifle too large and the chin a

      thought too square, but the brown eyes were large and clear, like a child's;

      their lashes long and curling and thick. The mouth was large too, a generous

      mouth with corners that turned up and smiled readily. She was neither tall

      nor short and a little on the plump side and looked considerably younger than

      her twenty- three years. She gave the bib of her apron a tweak and made for

      the door--it was time to dish the bowls.

      She had just put the last two in their appointed places when Sister appeared

      in the doorway. She said, "Good morning. Nurse," in a voice which gave

      Georgina no clue as to her mood. She returned the greeting and wasn't at all

      surprised when Sister went on, "Come into the office, will you. Nurse

      Rodman?"

      Georgina put the Cheatle forceps back in their jar and followed Sister across

      the wide e
    xpanse of Casualty to the little office. She shut the door behind

      her and stood in front of the desk, waiting to be told off.

      "Sit down," said Sister surprisingly. She put her hand in her pocket and

      handed Georgina a letter.

      "I thought you would like to have this as soon as possible," she said, and

      smiled.

      "If you would rather open it alone, I'll go outside."

      Georgina turned the envelope over and looked at its back; it told her

      nothing, so she looked at the front again.

      "Please don't go. Sister," she said at last.

      "If I open it quickly it won't be so bad."

      This piece of female reasoning was obviously one to which Sister could

      subscribe, for she nodded and said:

      "That's quite true--the quicker the better."

      Georgina undid the envelope with fingers which shook a little, and read the

      letter therein, then she folded it tidily and put it back in its envelope.

      When she spoke it was in a tone of great surprise.

      "I've passed," she said.

      "Well, of course you have, you silly girl," said Sister bracingly.

      "No one expected you to do otherwise." She smiled kindly, because it wasn't

      all that time ago that she had felt just the same herself.

      "You'd better go to Matron, hadn't you. Nurse?"

      Georgina got to her feet.

      "Yes, Sister, of course. Thank you for letting me come in here to read it."

      She got to the door and had the handle in her hand when she was astonished to

      hear Sister say, "Congratulations, George, You deserve it."

      Everyone called her George; it was inevitable with a name like hers.

      The housemen probably didn't know she had another name anyway, and even an

      occasional consultant had occasionally addressed her so; but no Sister had

      ever done so before. She flashed a delighted smile across the little room.

      It was, she realised, a very nice compliment.

      She was the last in the queue outside Matron's office--a gratifyingly long

      one. There was an excited and subdued hum of voices; everyone had passed; no

      one had let St. Athel's down. They went in one by one, and came out again

      in turn, looking pleased and slightly unbelieving. When it was at last her

      turn, Georgina knocked, entered and stood, as she had stood so many times

      before, in front of Matron's desk, only this time she was bidden to take a

      chair.

      Matron congratulated her with just the right mixture of motherliness

      authority and friendliness and then asked:

      "Have you any plans. Staff Nurse?"

      Georgina gave this careful thought. She hadn't dared to plan--there was some

      dim idea at the back of her head that she would like to go abroad--but there

      was Great-Aunt Polly to think of. She said finally, "No, Matron."

      "Splendid. I feel sure that when you have had a little more experience we

      shall be able to offer you a Sister's post."

      Georgina so far forgot herself as to goggle. Me? " she uttered, regardless

      of grammar.

      "A Sister? Would I do?" she asked ingenuously.

      Matron smiled benevolently.

      "You will do very well. Think about it--I believe you have a splendid career

      before you."

      Georgina found herself out in the corridor again. There was no one in sight,

      so she felt free to execute a few skips and jumps to relieve the excitement

      Matron's words had engendered. Even in these days of the nursing shortage,

      it was a signal honour to be offered the chance of a Sister's post within

      half an hour of becoming State Registered.

      She paused by one of the tall narrow windows overlooking the busy street

      outside. Matron had said, "A splendid career'. It occurred to Georgina at

      that moment that she didn't much care for the idea. At the back of her mind

      was a nebulous dream of a husband and children--an indistinct group rather

      like an out-of-focus family portrait hanging on some distant wall; the

      children indefinable in number and vague in appearance, and the man even more

      so, for she had no idea for whom she sought. Certainly she had not found him

      so far, and even if she did, she would have to wait and see if he felt the

      same way... Her train of thought was brought to an abrupt halt by the sound

      of the ambulance siren, joined within minutes by a second.

      Her interesting speculations were wiped from her mind as she sped along the

      corridor in the direction of Cas. There was still no one about, so she did

      the last few yards at a frank run, with the uneasy thought that nurses never

      ran except for fire and haemorrhage; well, there was no fire as far as she

      knew, but there was very probably haemorrhage. Sister was at the outer

      double doors, already thrown back and fastened. Georgina checked the

      trolleys; it was vital to have everything in a state of readiness. Minutes,

      even seconds, counted with someone badly injured. The ambulances, very close

      together, their blue flashers on, turned into the bay before the doors.

      "I'll take the first. Staff. Take the second--Staff Nurse Gregg is off

      until two, so is Jones; but we've got Beamish, and Peck's on at ten."

      She turned away as the first case was carried in and laid carefully on the

      first of the trolleys. A man, Georgina saw, before she gave her full

      attention to the second stretcher--another man, not a very young one either

      and in bad shape as far as she could see. He looked very blue.

      She said, "Good morning, Bert" --Morning, Ginger' to the ambulance men, then,

      "Wait a second." She opened the flaccid lips and felt around inside them

      with a gentle finger, then said comfortably, "Let's have these out of the

      way', and put the false teeth on the pillow. The unconscious face lost its

      blueness; she turned it to one side and said, " OK. " and they wheeled the

      trolley into the second of the cubicles.

      "RTA?" she asked.

      Bert nodded.

      "Lorry and a car--the other two's not too bad, I reckon, but these

      chaps--they've copped it. T'other went through the windscreen, this chap's

      had the wheel in his chest."

      They were in the cubicle by now, and the two men were already busy easing off

      the man's boots while Georgina turned on the oxygen and fixed the catheter in

      one pale, pinched nostril. She regulated its flow very precisely and then

      started to cut away the man's clothing to reveal the bloodstained shirt

      beneath. The ambulance men had already slipped an emergency dressing pad

      beneath it-they drew small hissing breaths of sympathy as her scissors

      snipped through the last few inches of sodden vest and exposed the patient's

      chest. Exactly in its centre there was an irregular depressed wound, several

      inches in diameter, still bleeding freely. Georgina began to swab it

      gently--it was a wonder that the man was still alive. She had almost

      completed her task when a man's voice said from behind her:

      "Let's have a needle and syringe, George, and get him cross-matched for some

      blood--he's going to need it. Get some ATS into him too, and let's have the

      rest of his clothes off and take a look at the damage."

      The owner of the voice had come to stand beside her and was already feeling

      with careful fingers. Georgina, quite undisturbed by the spate of orders,

      handed him a syr
    inge and needle and started to unscrew the lid of the Path

      Lab bottle, "Hallo, Ned," she said quietly. She liked the young Casualty

      Officer; he was keen on his work and clever enough at it not to pretend that

      he knew everything. He said now:

      "This one will need I.C.U--if we can patch him up sufficiently to get him

      there."

      They worked steadily. The ambulance men had gone after an exchange of

      cheerful goodbyes. They had just got the blood transfusion going, not

      without difficulty, when the Surgical Registrar joined them. Georgina liked

      him too; he was resourceful and tireless and quiet. She had often thought

      that he and Sister were well suited, and had several times suspected that

      they shared that view themselves. She hoped so.

      He stood between them now, looking down at the patient.

      "Intensive Care, Ned, and then theatre--there may be something we can do."

      He went on, "Congratulations, George. What a way to celebrate!"

      She was clearing up the small place with an urgent, methodical speed.

      She said, "Thank you," but had no time to say more, for Ned interrupted:

      "George, you've passed--wonderful! We knew you would, but it's nice to see

      it in writing, isn't it?" He laughed over at her, and she spared a moment to

      smile back. He really was rather a dear.

     


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