I might need.
“You’re getting a bit short of calcium, Dad,” Rosie said. She was six now and had been doing the rounds since she was two, so she was very familiar with the contents of the big slotted box that a friend had made for me to hold my drugs and instruments.
“Right, my pet,” I replied. “You’d better go and get some. Calcium is one thing we can’t do without.”
Flushed with importance, she ran inside to the stock room, and I wondered, as often before, why it was that, at home and on the farms, she always ran to get things for me, while Jimmy invariably walked.
Often, in the middle of a case, I’d say, “Fetch me another syringe, Jimmy,” and my son would stroll out to the car, often whistling, perfectly relaxed. No matter how interested he was in what was happening he never hurried. And I have often noticed that today, when he is a highly experienced veterinary surgeon, he still doesn’t hurry. This is probably a good thing, because ours can be a stressful occupation and going about things calmly must be the best way.
When all was ready we drove out into the hills. It was a bright morning with the bleak outlines of fell and moorland softened by the sunshine. There had been rain in the night and all the scents of the countryside drifted through the open windows.
The first farm was approached by a lane with several gates, and Rosie was delighted because this was her job.
As we drew up at the first one she was out of the car in a flash. Red-faced and serious, she opened the gate and I drove through.
“Lucky I was with you this morning, Dad,” she said. “There’s two more up ahead. I can see them.”
I nodded. “It is indeed, sweetheart. If there’s one thing I hate, it’s gates.”
My little daughter sat back, well pleased. In the days before she started school she used to be really worried.
“What are you going to do without me?” she would say. “I’ve got to go to school soon, and Jimmy’s there already. You’ll be all alone.”
Jimmy always seemed to be reasonably confident that I’d manage to struggle round on my own, but Rosie had grave doubts. Weekends for her were not just a time to play, but a blessed opportunity to look after her father. And for me it was a wonderful time and I marvelled at my luck. So many men with high-pressure jobs see very little of their families but I had it both ways with my little son and daughter so often at my side as I worked.
And there was no doubt about it, it was an absolute boon to have the gates opened for me. Rosie stood stiffly to attention as I drove through the last one. Her hand was on the latch and her face registered the satisfaction of a job well done.
A few minutes later I was in the cow byre, scratching my head in puzzlement. My patient had a temperature of 106° F but my first confident diagnosis of mastitis was eliminated when I found that the milk was white and clear.
“This is a funny one,” I said to the farmer. “Her lungs are okay, stomach working well, yet she’s got this high fever, and you say she’s not eating?”
“Aye, that’s right. She hasn’t touched her hay or cake this morning. And look how she’s shakin’.”
I pulled the cow’s head round and was looking for possible symptoms when my son’s voice piped up from behind me.
“I think it is mastitis, Dad.”
He was squatting by the udder pulling streams of milk onto the palm of his hand. “The milk’s really hot in this quarter.”
I went round the teats again and sure enough, Jimmy was right. The milk in one quarter looked perfect, but it was decidedly warmer than the others and when I pulled a few more jets onto my hand I could feel flakes, still invisible, striking my palm.
I looked up ruefully at the farmer and he burst into a roar of laughter. “It looks like t’apprentice knows more than the boss. Who taught you that, son?”
“Dad did. He said you could often be caught out that way.”
“And he was, wasn’t he!” The
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