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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Larkspur: A Sidewinder Tale - 12. Chapter 12 Gut Punch

Time wasted?

Gut Punch

 

 

The doctor’s office was around back of the telegraph office, a few places down from the livery. Mitch, after seeing the small sign hanging on the corner of the two-story building, dismounted and tied his mare to the hitching post. Sucking in a deep breath, he followed the boardwalk along the side until he reached a door with the name, Dr. E. Jergens painted on the glass in fancy black and gold letters. He didn’t know why he was fretting so, given he was only doing this to satisfy Coy. Standing in front of it for spell, he peered at his reflection before finally knocking.

The glass rattled loudly, but there weren’t no answer. Turning the handle, he found the door was unlocked. After waiting about a minute, he stepped inside and looked around. He took another deep breath, this time through his nose. It smelled like a doctor’s office, sure enough. The small room was empty, and he called out, but there was only the sound of a clock’s loud ticking on top of a white wooden cabinet. A curtained-off room to the right stirred his curiosity, and he took a peek through the slit.

It too was empty, but was no doubt the examination room, with a strange-looking chair set in front of the large, light-filled window. He turned his attention back to the waiting room and stared at the two chairs facing a scuffed oak table in the corner.

Sorely tempted to leave, he opened the door and stepped out. No one was in sight. Thinking about what Coy would say if he left, he sighed and went back in, reluctantly taking a seat in one of those chairs. He left the door open, though, to help freshen the heavy medicine smell of pine tar turpentine. It wasn’t long before the doctor hurried in.

Mitch guessed the man was a fair bit younger than him, with his hair still a dark gold color, thinning slightly, and his face free of lines. It was surprising to him a doctor could be younger than he was, but he stood and offered his hand immediately.

The man took it, and his handshake was firm. The eyes that met his were a bright and friendly green. “I was on a call outside of town. It’s been a hectic morning that started even earlier than usual. Were you waiting long?”

“Not long at all. I can come back another time if’n you’re busy,” Mitch offered, hoping it would be accepted.

Dr. Jergens took his worn traveling jacket off and hung it on a hook beside the curtained doorway, and then shrugged into a clean white one hanging on the hook next to it “Now is just fine. Had to attend a difficult birth, but mother and son are doing remarkably well,” he said with a tired smile. “Now, what can I do for you, Mister—”

“Willard. Mitch Willard.”

“Mitch? Oh, you’d be the friend of Boone and Coy’s from the southwest?”

“Yep, that’s me. How did you know that, if you don’t mind me asking?”

“There isn’t much happens in Larkspur people don’t hear about, especially someone new coming to town. If by chance you miss something, though, Alan Bright from the mercantile will ensure you hear tell before too long.”

“Ah, yes. One of those in every town. Right friendly fellow, he be.”

The doctor chuckled. “Suppose you’re right about that. Good man, yes… definitely a good man, and more informative than the weekly that arrives on the stage. Heard too you purchased some land next to Red Apple Farm?”

“That’s a fact, I did. Pretty piece of property to plant my boots on. Mr. Bright again?”

“Well, I believe he came by that information from Phineas Lemon, but yes, Alan was the one who told me,” he answered with an amused twist to his lips. “So… what health issue brings you to see me, Mr. Willard?”

“To tell you the truth, I don’t really see the sense to wasting your time, but I made a promise to Coy I would come listen to your opinion.”

“Oh? Well then… why don’t you tell me about what you don’t think is serious enough to need a doctor’s attention, and I’ll be the judge of time wasted?”

Mitch wasn’t sure, but considered he might have somehow insulted the man. “It’s not that it ain't serious… it is in fact, but I already got seen to by the doctor in Red Bluff.”

“Red Bluff? I remember that place—went through there once on the train. Dry and very dusty is what I recall most.”

“You remember it rightly. It’s that way most of the time, away from the foothills. They get more rain in those parts.”

Dr. Jergens nodded. “Still, it seemed a busy town. So what did this doctor have to say?”

“Told me plain I was dying, and there weren’t much to be done for me unless I went east, and only then to confirm his diagnosis.” Mitch tried to grin, but saw it fell flat with the man.

“Dying?” The doc looked startled for a second before his expression cleared. “I see. Did he say what you were dying from?”

“He called it tumor disease at first. Another time he called it carcina—carcino—something like that—said it were growths inside the body, like what you see inside butchered cattle and hogs sometimes.”

Doctor Jergens frowned. “The word is carcinoma, sometimes applied to a number of different conditions. And what did he base such a diagnosis on?”

“I’m not rightly sure, but truth is I was sicker than an old dog.”

“And? I’d appreciate if you would explain what you mean by that.”

“Surely… was bad… real bad. Were weak like I ain’t never been—that came first. Then I couldn’t hardly breathe, my guts turned to water, nothing stayed in my stomach at all, not even water more than a sip or two, and I lost weight powerful fast. The doc said the weight dropping off so quick was because of the disease.”

“Or the simple fact you couldn’t eat,” he said in a tone that Mitch found curious. “Anything else?”

“No… I don’t think so… other than I coughed all the time, and was spitting up blood.”

“From your lungs or abdomen?”

“Not rightly sure about that either. There was so much pain I didn’t much care what was coming from where. Mostly when I coughed, though, I guess, but there was blood a time or two that run out of me from the other end.”

“Red blood?”

“Yep, a couple of times I reckon.”

“I see, and where was this pain?”

“Mostly my whole chest… and my left side. Don’t know if it was my guts or what, but it wouldn’t let up most days.”

“And when was this? May I?” He reached forward and pulled Mitch’s bottom eyelids down, looking closely at first one, and then the other. “Good. So when was this?” he asked again.

“Ah… about four, five months ago, I reckon. It’s been almost three—or thereabouts—since I got up from my bed and rode out of town.”

“Were you still feeling sickly at that time?” He reached out and took Mitch’s hand, examining the fingernails and pushing on the skin around them. As far as Mitch remembered, no doctor had ever looked at his fingernails before… or pulled his eyelids down either, for that matter.

After he got over the surprise of it, he answered. “Surely was, yep, and had been the same way for a couple of months.”

“Why did you leave when you did if you were still sick and in so much pain? Did your doctor approve of you traveling?”

"He surely didn't. Told me to stay put when I mentioned I was thinking on it."

"Yet you left anyway. Why would you do such a thing, Mr. Willard?"

Mitch shrugged. “Well… cause I could, I reckon. I was still feeling poorly, but the pain let up enough I could move around. I was finally able to get out of bed without someone’s help… weren’t easy, though, but I truly didn’t want to die in there.” The doc’s question reminded him of just how desperate he’d been to leave at the time. “Always loved my house, but it was feeling like a pine box with the lid soon to close. I’d rather pass on under the stars, given a choice.”

This time Dr. Jergens did smile at him. “I can understand that, but if I were to tell you to stay put, I’d expect you to stay put. How are you feeling now?”

Mitch understood right then this doctor accepted no nonsense from his patients. Even not knowing him at all, his respect for him grew. Doc Bailey had lost interest in what was going on with him over time, but something told him this doctor wasn't one to give up on a patient. “Ah… guess you could say I’m having me a good spell.”

The man’s eyebrows rose, as if waiting for more. Them eyes were kind, but they bored right through you when he wanted to know something. Mitch had heard his own described the same way more than once.

“Ah… Doc Bailey said I could have some good spells… well… he said I might have a good spell, but it didn’t mean I weren’t still dying.”

“He did?” The man looked and sounded genuinely surprised. Might even be he was mortified.

Mitch couldn’t really tell for sure, though, and he was usually good at reading people. “It’s what he said. I figured he didn’t want to get my hopes up when I mentioned getting out of bed and hitting the trail.”

“That’s an interesting approach.” This time Mitch was sure he heard judgement. “So, what about right now… today? How do you feel?”

“I feel good. Really good most days, but I do still cough now and again.”

The doctor nodded, as if he’d expected to hear such. It stirred Mitch’s curiosity; what was the man thinking? “Would you say it’s worse than it was?”

“Not by a long ways. Ain’t even close to that… just a little aggravating now. Spent a month or more where I couldn’t hardly catch my breath.”

“I see. Did you cough up mucous during that time?”

“Mucous?”

“Thick spittle, often green or yellow, and sometimes brown.”

“Oh that. Yep, plenty of that, and all them colors for sure.”

“And now?”

“Not near as much. Mostly white spittle with some thickness to it.”

“I see. And your bowels?”

“My bowels? Oh, you mean….”

“Yes, do you form firm stools?”

“Ah… I didn’t back when I was doing so poorly, but they’ve been… firm yes… back to the usual for a while now.”

“Do you ever see any blood or black colored patches in them?”

“I don’t always look, but no, when I do, they look normal-colored, I reckon.”

“And can you take a deep breath?”

“Sure can.”

“And does it hurt at all?” he asked as he felt both sides of Mitch’s neck with his fingers. He pushed hard enough up under his jaw he let loose a squeak. He felt a mite foolish at making the noise, but the doctor didn’t seem bothered.

“No… no, I can’t say it hurts to breathe anymore.”

“And that’s been the case for a while too? Lift your arms all the way up, please.”

Mitch did, and the man's fingers pushed and prodded through his shirt at his armpits. He couldn’t help wondering what the man was looking for. “Ah… breathing ain’t hurt for weeks now. Coughing makes my throat feel raw sometimes, but that’s all.”

“Understandable. All right, you can put your arms down now and follow me.” He slid the curtain on the exam room doorway to one side while Mitch walked past him, and then closed it after them. “Take off your shirt and sit in the chair for me, please.”

Mitch did as he was asked, shucking his shirt and setting it on his lap. He watched as Dr. Jergens opened a slim wooden box and took out a contraption he’d never seen before. “What is that thing?”

“Something that was only invented a couple of years ago. To be accurate, it’s called a Cammann Binaural Stethoscope, and it allows me to listen to some of your internal organs, specifically your heart and lungs. Your previous doctor probably used a tube made of wood?”

“No, nothing like that. He put his ear on my chest to listen.”

“I see. That is surprising in this day and age—a very old practice indeed. There are new developments in medicine every day. Perfectly fine for its time, but this stethoscope is much more effective at diagnosing a patient’s health. It can help me detect any abnormalities in your different heart chambers, even blood flow, and of course air sounds traveling through your lungs.”

“So you’ll be able to hear the tumors?”

“No, not exactly, but I will be able to tell if there are any restrictions in your airways, as well as how well your lungs actually function.”

“Restrictions like what the tumors cause?”

“Exactly. If there are tumors or growths of concern, they would reduce the capacity and strength of your lungs, but let’s not get ahead of ourselves. His gaze traveled over Mitch’s upper body. “Have you been able to gain any weight back?”

“Since I’ve been staying with the boys, I sure have. I didn’t eat much on my trip here, but I’m eating good now. Reckon I got as good an appetite as I ever did have.”

“Excellent. You’re a little thin, but still a good weight, so there’s no need to gain much back. Can you tell me what these scars are from and how old they are?”

“Being a sheriff most of your life means you have plenty of opportunities to take some bullets, and I had more than my share. These are all old ones. It took me a while, but I finally learned how not to get shot.”

Dr. Jergens chuckled. “I supposed you’d have to if you didn’t want the alternative. This one along your bottom rib, what was that time like?”

“That was worse than the one in my gut for sure. They had to dig the bullet out and I swear it bothered me for two years or more.”

“Hurt to breathe?”

“Like the dickens, and whenever I twisted, but fortunately it weren’t on my shooting side, so I could hold a gun fine. What are you asking about that one for, Doc?”

“Well… I would suspect this one is still aggravating from time to time, am I correct?”

“I suppose. I got to be careful how I sleep sometimes.”

“Muscle damage and scar tissue most likely. They are often cause for chronic pain.”

“Chronic?”

“Means every so often it could flare up. Could even be frequent. Does coughing set it off?”

Mitch nodded. “It sure don’t help.”

“Can you open your mouth wide for me?”

Mitch did as he was asked and the doctor peered in.

“Good healthy teeth—something I wish I saw more often. Keep doing whatever you're doing to keep them that way. Now, turn your head towards the window for me. Yes, that’s good. Hmm… just as I thought,” he said, as if to hisself. “Okay, I think it’s time I listened to what’s going on inside. All you have to do is sit still and breathe normally until I tell you different. Lean forward please.”

“Sounds easy enough.” Mitch did as he was told and the doctor pushed on a lever that caused the chair back to lay flat. It reminded him of a barber’s chair. He watched as the doctor separated one end of the stethoscope contraption and put it into both ears. It was comical-looking, but he didn’t laugh. The other end appeared to be brass and was shaped like a little bell. He was surprised when the doc went behind him and placed that end against his skin, jumping slightly at the coolness of it. Old Doc Bailey had only placed his ear to his chest, not his back.

“Sit up straight please and remember to stay still. Just take normal breaths,” Doc Jergens repeated. After a minute or two of him moving the contraption around and tapping his finger against his skin, he asked Mitch to take a deep breath and hold it. Mitch did, long enough he thought he would pass out before the doctor told him to let it out. They repeated the process again and again before he moved around to the front. Again, there was more deep breaths and holding them before Mitch was asked to breathe normally.

“I’m going to listen to your heart now,” the doc said as he stood in front of Mitch, his concentration clear. Finally, with a sigh, he stepped away and set his contraption down. “You got a heart strong as a young horse, Mr. Willard.”

“I reckon that’s good?”

“It’s very good. How old are you.”

“Forty-seven, nearing forty-eight.”

“So yes, excellent for a man your age who’s been shot up like you have. Please lay back for me now.”

Mitch did, and the doctor moved close to the chair again, his hands examining Mitch’s stomach and up under his ribcage. He was pushing hard enough to make him grit his teeth and grunt in discomfort.

“Did that hurt?”

“No, I reckon not. Not used to getting poked so hard is all.”

“I find no one is,” he said with a grin as he continued poking and pushing. It weren’t long before he stepped away again. “Well, you’ll be relieved to know I’m done prodding you. Nothing to be concerned with in your abdomen.”

“Just the tumors in my chest?” he asked, needing to hear it said.

“Tumors? About that, Mr. Willard. I’m pretty confident in saying if there are any tumors in those lungs of yours, they are of no significance to your health.”

Mitch sat dead still and stared at this man who’d just said the impossible. It was as if his senses had up and left him—like when a fella gets gut punched and the breath ain’t coming—but the longer he stared, the more he could see the doctor had been serious. He finally let the words sink in, and then found the air to make his voice work. “But, how… how can that be? Don’t make no sense. Doc Bailey was so sure. How could he have been wrong about something like that?”

“He wasn’t wrong about you being sick, and he might have been right about how close you were to dying, but I suspect he would have eventually given you a different diagnosis if you hadn’t left town… and if you didn’t die.”

“I… I don’t understand?”

“And sometimes neither do we, to be completely honest. We doctors have to make our best guess in certain situations, and all the symptoms you described told your doctor it was extremely serious, and I would bet he’d seen similar cases in that town which resulted in death. What he got wrong was the cause of your illness, not its severity. Do you understand what I’m saying?”

“I was sick enough to die, but it weren’t because I had tumor disease.”

“Exactly.”

“So… why was I so sick then?”

“I can only speculate, because from what I see now, you have almost fully recuperated and are in quite good health. But, that said, I’m fairly certain it was an infection. Some doctors would call it inflammation, like with consumption, but we are learning that is inaccurate, or at least incomplete. It’s the same idea as a wound infection, but internal, and the lungs are a very susceptible organ. Once it sets in, it can be very difficult to treat. Unfortunately, while some recover, many—even most—don’t. You can put your shirt back on,” he said with a gesture as he packed his stethoscope back in its wooden box.

“I believe you had a grave internal infection, which in turn caused inflammation of your bronchial system, centered mostly, or at first, in the lungs, and constantly aggravated by the damage of the dust you’d breathed in over time.

“Bronchial?”

“Oh… yes, simply put, that’s basically any part of the body used for the breathing process, from your nose to your throat to your lungs. It’s all connected, and a serious infection spreads easily, and can eventually make it impossible for the lungs—the bronchial system—to function. Do you understand?”

“I think so,” Mitch answered, remembering how hard he had to work to draw breathe into his lungs. He’d felt at times like he was drowning. Still shook at what the doc had said about him having no tumors, he fought some dizziness.

Doc Jergens peered at him with a sympathetic expression before continuing. “As well, you have an old, chronic injury to your left side which left considerable scar tissue, some of which I can actually feel through the skin around the original wound. That tissue can get inflamed from time to time. That likely increased the severity of your pain while coughing. The infection itself would cause bleeding in your lungs, throat and esophagus. Your whole bronchial system would have been under attack. I’ve seen this type of infection a number of times—we don’t have a name for it yet—but it’s been referred to as ‘the fever’ and other names for many years. I can tell you those lucky enough to recover take months before they feel back to normal, and some suffer permanent damage to their breathing, and consequently, their physical strength and mobility.”

“But I haven’t?”

“Not that I can hear. Your lungs sound perfectly healthy, and your vigor has obviously returned, but it might be a while yet before you are fully recovered. Residual coughing is to be expected.”

“Residual? Does that mean it could go on for a while?”

“Exactly. In fact you could always have some cough, although I don’t expect that will be the case, based on your lung sounds.”

“So, if I have blood in my spit after I cough, that’s all right?”

“Do you?”

“Yep. For the first time in a while, but I laid on cold ground about four nights ago for a few hours, and got to feeling chilled.”

“How much blood are we talking about?”

“Hardly any… just a few spots of it, and none for almost two days now.”

“Your throat appeared irritated when I looked. Does it feel that way?”

“Yep, some… when I cough, but it’s getting better.”

“Any change in your bowels over the last few days?”

Mitch shook his head. “Just the coughing is all.”

“Then I don’t think it’s anything to worry about, but don’t drink anything too hot for a few days, and I would strongly suggest you avoid getting a chill of any kind. I can’t say for sure how your lungs will react in the future, but we’ll pay close attention to them over the coming months. As well, please keep in mind breathing in really cold air can activate your cough, so be vigilant this winter. We don’t want you coughing.

“The blood is coming from your throat because it hasn’t fully healed yet, but it should clear up on its own. I want you to come back in two weeks, just to be sure everything looks and sounds good, but I’m as confident as I can be you are a healthy man, Mr. Willard.”

“Mitch. Call me Mitch, if’n you’re comfortable with it.”

“All right, Mitch. I can see this comes as a shock to you, but I assure you I’m not wrong about this. You are not dying anytime soon… unless another bullet happens to find you.” He chuckled at his own joke, and Mitch smiled, feeling a lift of some of that awful weight he’d been carrying.

“Do you have any more questions for me? Anything at all?”

“No… well… I got one, I guess. How come I was one who didn’t die?”

“Only the Lord can answer that, I’m afraid, but I expect getting away from all that dust likely aided in clearing your lungs of the infection. Other than that, I would say a man who has survived as many gunshot wounds as you have, has to have a strong constitution… and a healthy share of good luck.”

Mitch thought about the old Indian poultice Doc Bailey had put on him, but didn’t bring it up—maybe next time he came in, he’d tell him about it. What mattered was he had a future, and whether luck or the lord or some Indian medicine had played a part in bringing him to Larkspur, he was thankful just the same.

“Can I ask you a question now, Mitch?”

“Surely.”

“I’m a curious man, and I can’t help wondering about something. Why did you buy your land if you believed Dr. Bailey’s diagnosis?”

Mitch didn’t mind the question, and didn’t need to think about his answer. “I love them boys, Coy and Boone, like they are my own blood… like they’re my sons… and I wanted to leave them something good when I was gone. Guess they’ll have to wait a few years yet before they can claim it.”

The doctor smiled, a full one this time. “I’d say at least twenty-five or thirty if you listen to your doctor when he tells you to do something.”

“I plan on it, doc, I surely do.”

He was shaking as he walked outside, after settling his bill and agreeing to return in two weeks. How wrong Doc Bailey had been was a hard thing to accept, so he stood on the boardwalk going over in his head all he’d just heard. The fact was, when all was said and done, he did believe everything Doc Jergens had just told him.

Mitch hadn't felt like a dying man lately, not at all, and turns out that feeling in his gut what he'd ignored, had been right. Somehow, Coy had known it too. Someone brushed him lightly as they walked past, and it spurred him to get moving. He wasn’t sure what to do first—he knew there were folks who deserved to hear what he’d learned, and he owed Coy something fierce—but his new land was calling to him. He made a decision what felt the right one to him.

He had a sudden and strong urge to speak his thanks to the Good Lord and the Great Mother, so he would go home and burn some more of that sweet smelling sage. Yep, that's what needed doing first.

  

 

 *

Hey, readers! So... how was that? How does Mitch's new diagnosis make you feel? Please share your thoughts if you can. Thank you for reading and supporting this story. Cheers!
Copyright © 2021 Headstall; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

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10 hours ago, 84Mags said:

Mitch lived with dying for long enough that it is no wonder he needs a moment to just live. Heading back to his land to give praise and burn sage will do him good. And just like it took awhile, but Mitch ‘finally learned how to not get shot’, something tells me after some pondering Mitch will figure out how to approach Will and finally just live. Boone and Coy are going to be so relieved/happy! I can’t stop smiling right now 😊

Exactly, Mags! It's what I saw happening... I think I would need a chance to regroup too, if that happened to me. It's quite a shock when the bottom falls out of what we think we know. :yes: Lol. Mitch might be a slow learner in some regards, but he does learn. I think he knows what he wants... he just has to let himself accept it. Cheers, my friend, and thanks! :hug: 

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8 hours ago, Parker Owens said:

Now Mitch has to figure out what to do with his new lease on life. That land of his must be calling him louder and stronger. But first and foremost, I hope it includes having the gumption to work things out with Will. 

I'd like to think his new land is a place he has already come to feel safe on. He might be a little nervous about what this means for him and Will, but I can't see him turning the man away again. We'll see. Thanks, Parker... much appreciated. Cheers! :hug: 

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8 hours ago, dughlas said:

I am pleased by this news, thank you. You done good with this chapter. I like the young doctor, he practices science based modern for its time medicine.

Thanks, bro! I reckon I like that I done good with this one. For me, it was pretty much the most important one, and I needed to get it as right as I could. I like Doc Jergens too. He knows his stuff, like you say, and it would seem he fits well in Larkspur. He was certainly the right one to see to get a second opinion. :D  Cheers, buddy! :hug: 

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5 hours ago, Story Reader said:

I agree with you about @Wesley8890reminding us all about we are all dying so thanks a lot, Wesley! As for the enthusiasm, we are all thrilled that Mitch is not dying and has a long life ahead of him. I agree with all about he needs to tell Will but his first priority is to himself and if it had been me then I would want to go home first to kiss the land to thank God and Mother Nature for sparing his life and healing him from what was wrong with him! I know Coy and Boone will be deliriously happy with the news and when he tells Will, as I know he will, then Will will be the one to kiss him and bring him to his knees in passion from the news! (Yes I have written a time or 2 or more on erotic stories lol)

Lol. @Wesley8890 does what he can. :P  I'm not saying we'll ever get to that hotter stuff, but yeah, Mitch could end up on his knees and saying prayers. :) I believe he has found refuge in his new land... and maybe peace for the first time since his first diagnosis. So, it seemed right he'd want to go back home first. :yes:  Thank you, my friend... happy you're happy. Cheers! G. :hug: 

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1 minute ago, Headstall said:

Lol. @Wesley8890 does what he can. :P  I'm not saying we'll ever get to that hotter stuff, but yeah, Mitch could end up on his knees and saying prayers. :) I believe he has found refuge in his new land... and maybe peace for the first time since his first diagnosis. So, it seemed right he'd want to go back home first. :yes:  Thank you, my friend... happy you're happy. Cheers! G. :hug: 

Someones gotta keep y'all grounded!!

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5 hours ago, Doha said:

I was so glad to see this sequel and have just read 12 chapters in 1 sitting. Loving it. Thank you for continuing this story. 

You're welcome, Doha. Thank you for continuing with me. I don't often write sequels, but this one wouldn't leave me alone. I'm glad it was so persistent in my brain. I love these guys, and I love this time period. The Old West has always had a romantic appeal to me. Thanks for sharing your thoughts... cheers! Gary.... :hug: 

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5 hours ago, mayday said:

I love how you have given us this revelation. I will admit that I actually suspected this diagnosis or something like it, but it is not easy to relate such conversations and the effect they have on the patients. Expecting the worst distorts our perceptions and reasoning but Mitch is lucky in his doctor, having found one he felt more and more confidence in, one he can and does trust. And he is strong enough to take such a punch and see it for what it is - an assurance that he has a future and the chance of a long one. Now of course we want to know what he is going to do with his new chance. Coy might have an idea or two for him...

Thank you for this new chapter!

It's tough not to give anything away, but that's my job, not to rob readers of the special moments. I'm sure many suspected Mitch's impending death wasn't cut and dried, so I'm happy you liked the way I handled this revelation. That means a lot. :D  I wanted to show how he began to trust this new doctor... he needed to, because he shot all of Mitch's perceptions to hell... in a good way. 

Lol. I'm sure you're right about Coy, mayday. Will he get a chance to give Mitch another push? Hmmm. We shall see. :P  Cheers and thanks, my friend. Happy you enjoyed this. :hug:  

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4 hours ago, FanLit said:

YAAAAAAAAAY❣️❣️❣️❣️
I KNEW YOU WOULDN’T DISAPPOINT, GARY❣️❣️  MMMMMWWWWAAAHHH❣️❣️
What a relief….WHEW❣️❣️
*HAPPY DANCE*
 

First off: “Mitch guessed the man was a fair bit younger than him, with his hair still a dark gold color, thinning slightly, and his face free of lines…..The man took it, and his handshake was firm and friendly. The eyes that met his were a friendly green.”  Made me think of Boone not knowing who his Daddy is….Dr. Jergens has an excellent bedside manner and he very much reminds me of Boone’s eye of the hurricane calmness.  I also like the name “Jergens” for the doctor, I use the lotion by that name and he reminds of what lotions can do-soothe and smooth.

I was almost of a mind to call Dr. Bailey a quack, especially contrasting his diagnostic skills to Dr. Jergens’;  I had to remind myself that medicine was often used with the five senses prior to it’s technological advances which would have often resulted in misdiagnoses (modern medicine can still result in those, lol).  At best, Dr. Bailey is a doctor who sticks with what he knows & that is a timeless diagnosis, lol.  I loved seeing what I believe was a precursor to today’s stethoscope but wasn’t able to determine the actual malady that befell Mitch.

 Speaking of Mitchell….he has a new lease on life, I’m very excited to see what comes next.  Thank goodness Coy isn’t the type to say “I told you so” and that reunion sex between Mitch and Will is gonna be EPIC!! :gikkle:

Next week’s installment of “As Larkspur Turns” can’t come soon enough!! 🌎 

Good job, Gary :thankyou:  🍻

OMG. You know what's funny? In my last edit(of many) of this chapter, I changed the doc's eye color from blue to green for some reason, and instantly I thought of the dad Boone never met as well. I'm always considering possibilities.... :)  Now that you mention it, I do see some similarities between the doc and Boone. Might needs be another sequel. :P 

Yeah, I think it would be unfair to call old Doc Bailey a quack. As you say, he knows what he knows, and new fangled ideas are something he doesn't need. Health care was pretty much hit and miss back then... even the better doctors used questionable cures, like the pine tar kerosene I mentioned, which was used for many things. A lot of it was guess work and trial and error. 

That stethoscope was real... and a very important development for medicine. It was invented in 1852, and mass produced immediately. As far as the malady Dr. Jergens describes, we can all speculate, but I believe it was pneumonia, an often fatal disease of the time.

No, Coy isn't one to say Itold you so, but we know how thankful Mitch is that he pushed him.

Reunion sex? Who said anything about reunion sex. :huh:  I have no idea where you got that from. 0:)  

Cheers, my sweet and lovely friend... G. :hug: 

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1 hour ago, Albert1434 said:

Well Oh My God Mitch isn't going to die now he has a lot to do. And love can now happen and the boys will be so happy! So much can now come to pass:yes:

Such a good Chapter thanks a lot!

Woot! Woot! No, Mitch is not going to die anytime soon. :D  I'd say love has already happened, but there are two men who will need to see eye to eye. We'll have to see if there's any stubbornness left in Mitch. :unsure2:  Thanks, buddy... happy you liked this one. It was a rewarding one to write. Cheers! :hug: 

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24 minutes ago, FanLit said:

Speaking of maladies-Mitch has a shitload of complications from his bullet wounds, one that doesn’t sound as though it completely healed.

”As well, you have an old, chronic injury to your left side which left considerable scar tissue, some of which I can actually feel through the skin around the original wound. That tissue can get inflamed from time to time.”

Eww.   Scar tissue can be a real bitch.  🩹

Yes it can. And seriously, Mitch really is lucky to be alive with the career he's had. I think all his wounds are long healed, but one in particular will always be a reminder of what a bullet can do. It's another reason for him to wear kerchief over his mouth in cold weather to protect his lungs and keep him from coughing. All a part of getting older. :)  

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8 minutes ago, VBlew said:

Great chapter, and agree with everyone else about the good diagnosis. This was my feeling for what the improved Mitch was going to be. Looking forward to where this takes him in the future, especially with Will.

Thanks, buddy. I think Mitch has really changed since he left Red Bluff. Suddenly, being a sheriff wasn't as important to him. We'll see if that holds, because now he could go back to that profession if he wants. There needs to be a talk with Will, though, and where that leads him. I think we can all agree these guys are meant to be together... but life can be funny sometimes. 🤞

Cheers, and thanks for sharing your thoughts, VBlew. :hug:  

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2 minutes ago, Danners said:

thank god crying GIF

Get you a life, Mitch! Get you the man who's loved you for decades! build yourself a cabin with a feather bed and insulated walls so you two don't wake the neighbors making up for lost time!

You always make me smile, buddy. Yeah, Mitch, you go, gurl! It's tough to know what's coming next for Mitch... I think he has some very important decisions to make, and I guess we'll see where Will falls in all of it. :) Cheers, my friend... hope you enjoyed this one. :hug: 

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Hm, Mitch's examination sounds a lot like the one I get when I go in for a check-up, minus the blood pressure reading.  I'd have no problem trusting this doctor even now since he truly is concerned with his patients' welfare...today much is lost with the emphasis on seeing lots of people to meet costs and you seldom actually talk to the doctor for more than ten minutes now.

Also, I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss some traditional remedies as those were based on the experience of generations of familiarity with natural herbs and their properties we are sometimes now just rediscovering.

Perhaps now he'll talk to Will and begin thinking of a future with him...

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45 minutes ago, ColumbusGuy said:

Hm, Mitch's examination sounds a lot like the one I get when I go in for a check-up, minus the blood pressure reading.  I'd have no problem trusting this doctor even now since he truly is concerned with his patients' welfare...today much is lost with the emphasis on seeing lots of people to meet costs and you seldom actually talk to the doctor for more than ten minutes now.

Also, I wouldn't be too quick to dismiss some traditional remedies as those were based on the experience of generations of familiarity with natural herbs and their properties we are sometimes now just rediscovering.

Perhaps now he'll talk to Will and begin thinking of a future with him...

For all the advances in medicine, there is still the hands on, eyes open and observing the small details approach that I think every good doctor uses, so I could see that being relied on even more in those times. Doc Jergens is a student of medicine, and I don't believe he will ever stop being so. He has the earliest version of the stethoscope, invented only two years prior, and that tells us a lot. I'm sure too, he subscribes to every medical paper/journal, and we know there are weekly news deliveries by stage.  :)

He may not have have fancy lights, but notice that his exam chair was placed in front of the large south facing window? Yeah, I would have no trouble using him too, and trusting him. 

As far as traditional remedies, Mitch plans on telling him on his next visit about the yellow dock root poultice(an Indian remedy), that Doc Bailey used on him. Who knows? It could possibly have saved his life back then, or prolonged it enough he could begin to recover. 

The future looms, so yeah, buddy, he's going to need to talk to Will... after he decides what his life is going to be now that he has one again. Thanks, CG, and cheers! :hug:  

Edited by Headstall
  • Love 5

I suspected we were going to arrive at this moment. This chapter was exceptionally well-written, and the examination with Dr. Jergens just wonderful to read. Doc Bailey's failure was revealed, but I don't think he is totally to blame. He is evidently a product of an earlier time, earlier knowledge, and earlier procedures, and did as well as his experience allowed. I think Dr. Jergens was correct, that Doc Bailey would have eventually modified his diagnosis had Mitch stayed around.

I don't think Mitch should run right to anybody with the news just yet. He has to accept that news himself first, understand its implications, and examine his options now. Another twenty or thirty years of life is a LOT!

He has actually taken some very good first steps at securing that life, without even knowing he was to have it!

Wonderful chapter, Gary! I feel like the rest of this story will be quite fun to read. :)

 

 

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1 hour ago, Geron Kees said:

I suspected we were going to arrive at this moment. This chapter was exceptionally well-written, and the examination with Dr. Jergens just wonderful to read. Doc Bailey's failure was revealed, but I don't think he is totally to blame. He is evidently a product of an earlier time, earlier knowledge, and earlier procedures, and did as well as his experience allowed. I think Dr. Jergens was correct, that Doc Bailey would have eventually modified his diagnosis had Mitch stayed around.

I don't think Mitch should run right to anybody with the news just yet. He has to accept that news himself first, understand its implications, and examine his options now. Another twenty or thirty years of life is a LOT!

He has actually taken some very good first steps at securing that life, without even knowing he was to have it!

Wonderful chapter, Gary! I feel like the rest of this story will be quite fun to read. :)

 

 

Thanks, Geron. As much as I tried to divert, it was pretty obvious this might be coming. :)  The disparity in medicine at that time fascinated me when I first started piecing the story together. I learned that some doctors were practicing medicine at the time with no real training. Of course, that's not so shocking when we consider Indians practiced their medicine with no 'formal' training, yet their skills proved considerable.

There were doctors who were sorely lacking in skill and knowledge, but they did what they could out of necessity, so no, we can't blame Dr. Bailey. We can, though, question his commitment to his craft and his patients. It sounds like he was overworked and tired. :unsure2: 

Doc Jergens is one of those forwarding thinking men/doctors the world has always needed. He takes his craft seriously... and I suspect will always be learning and improving. 

I know Mitch, and I was certain he would need to regroup after hearing something so unexpected. Good point that he may have already set his course. It's just a matter of whether he realizes that, and of course, whether he wants it.

Cheers! :hug:  

 

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