Chapter 1: Surgery for Non-Surgeons
Voluntary Service Overseas
Five months
later, I was sitting on the toilet at Gatwick Airport opening a bag
of Maltesers. I popped a couple in my mouth and leaned against the cistern
to stare at The Pregnancy Advisory Service number. Not that I was ever
likely to need their services. 'Finding a man' was on my list of goals
- after saving the world, saving lives and saving my soul, of course.
And losing weight. Four more Maltesers followed their siblings.
Hiding in
the Ladies to avoid check-in didn't say much for the state of my soul
and with only two blokes in our group (a little Cockney mechanic and
a married man pushing fifty with a wooden leg) finding a man had to
be easier in Dunblane.
That left
saving the world (always a bit unrealistic) and saving lives (not likely
after the Surgery For Non Surgeons course.) I stuffed a handful of Maltesers
in and crunched. Although I wore a mantle of sunny optimism, my robust
exterior and endless jollity belied my lack of self-confidence but then,
of course, all extroverts claim to be shy. People my size, with the
voice to match, are not allowed to be vulnerable. My voice. Ughh, now
there was a thing. Too loud and too English. How I longed for a soft
Scottish burr like Morag's. I had spent six years at Dunblane High School
and six years at Edinburgh University, declaring that I was a real Scot.
It wasn't my fault that I had spent my pre-school years as an Air Force
daughter (until my father crashed his plane into a water buffalo which
inconsiderately ambled across the runway). With this hereditary tendency
for embarrassing disasters, why was I setting myself up for more?
"OK,
Em. You don't have to go." I was right, I didn't. I hadn't checked
in, and could easily sneak off before my VSO compatriots even knew I'd
arrived. There were other ways of achieving my goals. I could go on
a diet, for instance. Hells bells, I could even start going to church!
I rummaged
around in the bottom of the bag of Maltesers to find only a single osteoporotic
crumb of honeycomb. Pathetic. I crumpled the bag and was about to sling
it on the floor when my middle-class upbringing got the better of me.
I was not a mere smoker who indulged her habit in the toilets and threw
her butts in the pan. I was a chocolate eater and we were surely a better
breed of addict. I put the wrapper in the sanitary disposal unit and
sighed. Time to make a move.
I kicked
my rucksacks, crammed with Tampax, rubber gloves and of course Primary
Surgery, out of the cubicle. The choice between the rubber gloves and
a pile of rubbishy best-sellers had been a difficult one, but AIDS mania
filled the tabloid and medical press at that time, and Africa's figures
were alarming. Catching HIV from a patient during surgery seemed a cruel
reward for attempting to save the world. Another good reason for staying
at home.
Turning the
cold tap full on, I washed my face under the washbasin mirror. My usually
warm brown eyes frowned back accusingly, puckering my neat nose and
cupid's bow mouth. Perhaps the straight dark bob with Cleopatra fringe
didn't flatter my square face and perhaps if I ever tried a little makeup
still, I looked quite young for twenty-seven - a sturdy example of a
female Homo Sapiens, built to withstand the rigours of Africa. Nice
teeth too, I was told. I smiled to reveal my best feature. All the better
for eating with.
"Hi,
Emily, you're here!" I jumped. Lindsey dropped her bags next to
mine and threw her arms round me. "The others are all checking
in. They thought you'd wimped out!"
"No
way!" I laughed. "Not me!"
"That's
what I said," Lindsey giggled in a lovely Scottish lilt that I
would have killed for. It was hard to imagine a more unlikely librarian.
"Wait for me, would you? This is the fourth time I've been. I'm
so excited!"
I watched
Lindsey's svelte figure slip into my cubicle then cursed at the mirror.
Positive
thinking. That was the trick. Visualise yourself as you want to be and
it will be so. I closed my eyes to imagine my metamorphosis, two years
hence.
There I was,
slim and glamorous, an accomplished surgeon, stepping off the plane
on the arm of a handsome diplomat, my friends gaping at the swan before
them
"Dream
on." I stuck my tongue out at my reflection "Just try to survive
two years without killing too many patients or sticking yourself with
an AIDS-infected needle."
At least
there was still time to buy another bag of Maltesers.