The Hidden Object In A 6-Year-Old Girl’s Cast Made Me Hit Panic-Teptep

By 3:07 p.m. last Tuesday, the rain was beating against the paediatric orthopaedic clinic windows with the hard, flat sound of water hitting glass that had nowhere else to go.

The corridor smelt of disinfectant, damp coats, and coffee that had sat too long on the nurses’ station heater.

I remember those details because, in hospital work, your mind often stores the ordinary things around the moment that changes everything.

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The whirr of a printer.

The squeak of rubber soles on polished floor.

The feel of a clipboard edge against your palm.

I had been removing casts for twelve years, long enough to know the rhythm of a frightened child before anyone else in the room noticed it.

Most children are afraid of the saw.

Parents are usually worse.

The saw looks like something that belongs in a workshop, not beside a child’s leg, and even though it vibrates rather than slices, even though it is made to cut the hard plaster or fibreglass without harming the skin beneath, the noise can make the bravest little face crumble.

That is why I had a line I used often.

“This won’t take long.”

It was not always completely true.

But it was kind, and sometimes kindness is the only anaesthetic you are allowed to offer.

Then Lily came in.

She was six years old, according to the form.

Small for the examination couch, smaller still under the weight of the hot pink full-leg cast that ran from thigh to ankle.

Her yellow T-shirt hung loosely from narrow shoulders, the colour faded as if it had been washed too many times and dried in a rush.

She climbed onto the paper-covered couch without being asked twice.

That was the first thing that made me look up properly.

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