Authors: Lawrence Scott
Vincent made his way to Mother Superior's office between the rows of huts which reminded him of the dilapidated barrack rooms on his family estate at Versailles. On the right of these, in a cluster, were some which Singh was asking to be made available for the married quarters. Mother Superior was resisting. Singh had taken it upon himself to represent the demands of the patients, or the people, as he called them.
When Vincent entered Mother Superior's office, Singh was
already there and in full flow. âMother Superior, you can't have people living in these hovels, these barrack rooms. You can't have men living away from their women. These people are people, you know.' Vincent let Singh talk. He was saving his powder for later.
He watched Mother Superior's eyebrows arch as Singh went on. She began with, âMr Singh,' in that sardonic tone. âI'm running a hospital and a convent. You seem to be starting a revolution.'
He came back at her. âMother Superior, I with the people and we asking for some basic human rights.'
âMr Singh, we're talking about poor, ignorant people who have an incurable disease!'
âWhere we agree is that they poor. Where we differ is that they are ignorant and incurable.'
He would not leave it alone. Vincent found himself an unlikely, momentary, mediator.
Singh was pressing for change. Vincent wanted it too, but done differently. âUse your scalpel, Doctor. Is an operation we need here.'
âThat's not the only remedy a doctor has at his disposal,' Vincent answered. âWith many of my patients disintegrating before my eyes, the lancing of wounds is the last thought on my mind. It is more a question of education in hygiene, awareness of their conditions and the truth about their disease.'
âDoctor Metivier, I agree. We're just putting it differently. But as the pharmacist here, I'm frustrated by how few drugs we've got at our disposal to administer.'
âI agree with that. Weâve got to press the authorities for this.' Singh was schooled in the politics of protest and struggle. He had noticed. He had come from the labour riots in the cane fields. He had had his education at the university of hunger as he called it.
âGentlemen. We don't have the drugs. But what we've got is prayer and faith,' Mother Superior interjected.
âPrayer and Chaulmoogra oil. Dr Escalier's way.' Vincent was never too sure that his new appointment had met with Mother Superior's approval. He was appointed by the government, she by the church. This was an old battle. She had been very fond of his predecessor, the old Frenchman, who had retired and wanted to return to France before the outbreak of the threatened war, to be
with his family. He had been a firm believer in the repeated injections of Chaulmoogra Oil.
As Singh and Vincent left Mother Superior with tempers boiling, she interrupted their departure. âDoctor Metivier.' Singh left the room. âRemember your vocation, Doctor.'
âI've not heard any call, Mother. I'm motivated by justice and wanting to heal patients, rather than faith in God.'
âWell Doctor, that's what you call it. But I know that it must be God that has called you here or else you would fail.'
âKrishna, Hanuman the monkey, which one? Which pantheon are you using? Is it your Triune god? Or is it the prophet Mohammed's Allah?' He could not help it sometimes, provoking Mother Superior. âAre you talking about Shango?'
At this she fumed. She might as well know his true colours. There was no arguing. Why get into these discussions? Vincent thought. She might have the power to get rid of him.
âWhich drums should I listen to? Those that beat for Legba, the Prophet Mohammed or the Messiah?'
âDoctor, you run the risk of blaspheming. And you know I would not be paying any attention to drums. You shouldn't encourage these people in their superstitions.'
âYou can only blaspheme if you are a believer, Mother. Superstitions? Me? Encourage? Who is more superstitious? The drums at least have some life in them. You can't live on El Caracol and ignore the drums.'
âYou think intellectualism will save you. You're a young man. You'll learn. You'll see, one day you'll reach the end of your endeavours, and there'll be someone else you'll have to call on.'
âWhen I reach the end of what I know, Mother, I'll say I don't know. I'll wait. I'll wait. I'll search. I'll research, and I'll keep observing.'
âWait for whom, for what? Search for whom, for what?'
âFacts. Knowledge. And there is beauty.' Vincent looked to the hills and then over the sea, stretching out his hand.
âA poet as well, I see, Doctor?'
They always agreed to differ. But he heard her sigh and bemoan the fact that she had lost Dr Escalier.
Singh was waiting outside. âWe want you on our side,' he said to Vincent as they walked down from the verandah.
âI'm always on the side of my patients.'
âOn the side of the people?'
âWhat do you mean?'
âI know you is a doctor. Butâ¦'
âBut what?'
âAnd is up in Gran Couva you come from? Versailles, big cocoa estate? All you French creole! We know all you, you know.' He turned away.
âSingh, don't turn from me like that. I know what you mean. But you're going to have to trust what I do, even if you don't like what I sometimes say. And you're going to have to mistrust appearances. I am who I am. But what do you see?'
Singh turned back and smiled. âOkay, Doctor.'
From the verandah, Vincent watched the light play with the trees, with the water and with the sky above. In the shimmer, the separateness of everything was diminished. Returning, after his seven years of training in England, had given him a transfigured vision of the place, the land and its history. Its hope was in this mingling of people, a shocking idea for some, he knew; as the trade unions pressed for their rights and the old planter class and the new import-export businesses resisted. He would have faith in the people and in the endurance of the place. Yes he did believe in the people.
Each day was like he had arrived yesterday. âThis is beauty, boy!' He turned towards Singh. âJust ordinary beauty.'
âWhat you say, Doctor?'
âOrdinary beauty!'
âWe place.'
âI think it should be.' There was pride in Singh's voice which delivered his words with the timbre of a labour leader.
Coolies in the sugar and niggers in the oilfields
. Vincent heard Theo's voice, ringing the bitterness out of Mister's words in his night calypso. The child was reading the time.
Parrots, in pairs, screamed low across the sky above them, splashes of green; minnowing shadows skimming over the surface of the sea, hysterical.
âDocta?' Ti-Jean had escaped again from the nuns and the classroom and was tugging at Vincent's arm, while balancing on his crutches. âYou daydreaming again!'
âJust the man I want. Let's make our rounds. Where's Sister Thérèse and Theo? I need them too.'
âThem in the school. How old he is, Doc? He quiet quiet. But he could read. He could read pappy! He read from the Royal Reader to all the children. But I know that story already so I come to look for you.'
Vincent winked at Sister Thérèse as she joined them. She had a soft spot for Ti-Jean as well. Theo had elected to stay in the classroom. Sister Rita had chosen him as her assistant. He was reading and doing sums with the small ones.
âFirst, I want to see the patients who came in recently on the boat from Porta España. That girl, Christiana. Did you notice any bad cases?' Then he remembered that Sister Thérèse had not been at the hospital for the last week.
âWhen they meet you, Ti-Jean, they know that there is hope. I want you to organise a football match in recess. And I want the teams mixed. No more of that bad cases in one team, good cases in another. Let the girls play too if they want. I know Monica will take on any of you fellas. Ask Theo to play and Christiana, the new girl.'
âHe could play football? He quiet quiet!'
âWell, you'll have to see.'
They began their rounds in the infants' ward. Ti-Jean and his irrepressible talk and humour kept everyone amused and distracted from the horrors which were the inevitable object of the doctor's rounds.
âSo, spirits high today! But first let me see your wounds. Are they healing? Ti-Jean, what's this sore? And this on your toe. Come, come! How can I take you onto the ward as an example of how the others must look after themselves, if you let me down. Sister, come, let's get this boy cleaned up.'
âI sorry Docta. I don't know how this happen. I sorry, Docta.'
âWe'll have you cleaned up in a jiffy. Don't say sorry. Say, I'm going to be more vigilant.'
Sister Thérèse watched Vincent at each bedside, his hands always reaching out to the children. These were the ones who moved her the most, and he was particularly good with children. âTouch.' He had taught her that. âYou must touch your patients, not only professionally, but as a friend. And these little ones, pick them up, hug them, caress them.' She knew that his advice was not Mother Superior's which spoke of decorum. She was of the school of thought who believed, despite the evidence, that infection was easy. She believed in quarantines. Vincent's new regime meant increasingly open nursing and proper education in hygiene. âWe have to understand this disease. We don't believe in Medieval plagues.' He spoke like her father, Sister Thérèse thought, both as a doctor and as the free-thinking Communist her father was. Both he and her mother had joined the party.
Even with the windows open to the sea breeze, there was that pervasive smell of rotting flesh mixed with the smell of Chaulmoogra Oil when they peeled off the used bandages. Sister Thérèse was at hand with new dressings, the lint falling through her fingers.
âI want all these wounds dressed today. We must have fresh dressings everyday. I insist. Even if it means they have no cotton bed sheets left in Sancta Trinidad to sleep on. Strip them and tear them into bandages.'
Vincent turned to Ti-Jean, took him by the shoulder. âStand straight, boy.' He smiled at Ti-Jean. They alone knew that they had just got him ship-shape for this exhibition. âThis boy is not a miracle,' Vincent announced. âHe's a trickster, yes. Stand straight boy. But no miracle.' Ti-Jean was giggling, trying to balance straight, playing tricks with his crutches like a performer in a circus. He was enjoying the attention and the prominence on the ward.
âThere are no miracles here. Only common sense and hygiene. Medicine is reason and science. Keep your bandages on. Watch yourselves as you move about. Watch for rats!' The small children screamed. Rats were an endemic problem in the night, nibbling toes and fingers. âYou must divide up the time to keep watch at night. Those who spot a rat and chase it off get a penny from me.'
Vincent continued down the ward on his rounds, giving instructions, examining, making the children smile and laugh. He was speaking to the staff more than to the children. He believed in the repeated insistence of his theories which he was developing. âYou may think you have been trained. Well, you have to retrain.'
âAnd love, Docta. You know is love too.' One of the old ward assistants was mopping down the floors between the beds. She had lived her entire life on El Caracol.
âYes, Ma Rosie, there's love. Yes, sweetheart.' She beamed. He bent and kissed her on the cheek. She beamed again.
âIs faith that heal me,' she proclaimed to the ward.
âDon't believe a word,' Vincent echoed, âHygiene and common sense. But, have your faith as well, Ma Rosie, if it makes you look after your sores and wounds. Have your faith.'
âThank you, Docta.' Ma Rosie beamed again. âIs love, I mean.'
âAnd what about the prayers the chaplain does say with we?' Sybil Goodridge, who had been at El Caracol since she was a baby, declared. She was one of Mother Superior's spies, Vincent calculated.
âIf prayers help, pray. But don't forget what Dr. Metivier tells you.'
âYes, Docta.' There was a chorus across the ward.
Sister Thérèse knew that when Vincent lectured he was not ordering her or his patients. He was speaking out against the imposed economies, the lack of rations. He was talking out for the Colonial Office in Porta España to hear. She had overheard the loud arguments in Mother Superior's office.
She tried her best. She was his ally. âYes, Doctor.' She winked at Ti-Jean and they moved on. She liked this conspiracy of three.
âYou have a story to tell me.' Vincent spoke directly to Sister Thérèse as he leant over to take a clean bandage from her hands.
âDoctor?'
âYour father?'
Sister Thérèse's eyes filled with tears. âPapa.' Her voice betrayed a guilt, as if she had been caught not keeping vigil over his memory. âNot now. Not here.'
âLater, then. Yes?' He smiled, not teasing this time, respectful.
She continued to hand him clean bandages. Then she said, âHe's a doctor too.'
âAh. Why will they kill him? And who are they?' Vincent asked directly.
âI know it sounds wild. Well, the stories you hear. He's Jewish.'
âYour surname, yes, Weil? What about your mother?'
âShe died five years ago.'
âI'm sorry. A Jewish Catholic?'
âMe, yes. My mother was Hélène du Bois. They fell in love at the Sorbonne. She was brilliant.'
âAnd you are a brilliant nurse, right across from the other side of the world.'
âYes. I meanâ¦'
Vincent smiled. âWe'll talk later.'
Ti-Jean amused the patients with his jokes and tricks, dropping his crutches and then crashing to the ground after them, or keeping his balance and proclaiming a miracle. âSee what Docta do!'