Page 1 of Bedside Manner


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Chapter 1

The Sterile Field

Maxwell

The heart is a dramatic organ.

It is a fist of muscle, a battery of electrical impulses, a fragile vessel that decides, sixty to one hundred times a minute, whether a human being continues to exist or becomes a memory.

I prefer it when the heart is silent.

"Clamp."

The word is barely a breath, but in the hyper-pressurized silence of Operating Room 3, it sounds like a gavel strike. A scrub nurse, her eyes visible only above a tightly fitted mask, slaps the hemostat into my outstretched gloved hand. She doesn't speak. In my OR, nobody speaks unless the patient is dying, and my patients do not die.

I adjust my grip. I look down into the open chest cavity of the fifty-five-year-old senator lying on the table. The bypass is complete. The sutures are microscopic works of art, the kind ofstitching that should be hung in a gallery, not buried under layers of fascia and skin.

"Releasing cross-clamp," I announce.

This is the moment. The terrifying, suspended second where the heart, cold and still for the last two hours, has to remember its purpose.

I wait. I don't pray—God has nothing to do with the precision of a vascular anastomosis—but I do hum. It’s a subconscious tick, a low, vibrating thrum in the back of my throat. Bach.Cello Suite No. 1 in G Major.The prelude.

Thump.

A single, sluggish contraction.

"Sinus rhythm returning," Dr. Sato drones from the head of the table. He sounds bored, which is the highest compliment an anesthesiologist can pay a surgeon.

Thump-thump.

The monitor picks up the beat, transforming the silence into a rhythmic, reassuringwhoosh-hiss. The blood begins to flow, pink and oxygenated, surging through the new vessels I have constructed. It is perfect. It is mechanical poetry.

"Flow is excellent," I say, keeping my voice flat. "Closing."

I don't smile. A York doesn't smile for doing the job he was bred to do. I step back from the table, peeling off my bloody outer gloves with a snap, leaving the closing to my senior resident.

"Dr. York?" Indira asks, her voice trembling slightly. "Do you want to check the drain placement?"

"If you can't place a drain by your fifth year, Dr. Singh, you should consider a career in dermatology," I say. I don't look at her. I walk to the scrub sink, the adrenaline of the surgery already receding, replaced by the familiar, cold hollowness that lives in my chest.

I scrub out, the ritualistic washing of hands that strips awaythe blood and the responsibility. I check my reflection in the steel mirror. Not a hair out of place. My black hair is slicked back, immobile. My pale blue eyes are clear behind my rimless glasses. I look exactly like my father. I look exactly like the statue of my grandfather in the lobby.

I look like a machine.

I dry my hands and check my watch.11:45 AM.I have a department meeting at noon, followed by rounds, followed by a donor dinner my mother is forcing me to attend.

I push through the double doors of the surgical wing, expecting the hushed, carpeted serenity of the Cardiothoracic Department.

Instead, I walk into a construction site.

A plastic tarp hangs from the ceiling, flapping in the draft of the ventilation system. The smell of drywall dust overpowers the scent of antiseptic. The waiting area—usually a sanctuary of beige leather and muted abstract art—is gone. In its place is a gaping hole in the wall and two men in hard hats eating sandwiches on a stack of drywall.

I stop dead. A piece of tinsel, cheap and silver, has been taped to the plastic tarp.Merry Christmas, it mocks.

"Dr. York!"

I turn to see my administrative assistant, a woman who usually possesses the calm demeanour of a bomb disposal expert, looking frantic. She is holding a cardboard box.