© 2023 Duleigh Lawrence-Townshend. All rights reserved. The author asserts the right to be identified as the author of this story for all portions. All characters are original, any resemblance to anyone living or dead is purely coincidental. This story or any part thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the expressed written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a review or commentary.
The genesis of this story came to me several years ago when a Physician's Assistant that worked in a burn unit told me in gushing terms how much she loved her job. To me, working in a burn unit would be a terrible job, but she loved working there and helping burned and disfigured patients. Ever since then I began to look at medical personnel and medical specialties differently, because in the end, all the kidding I give my doctors aside, it truly is about the love. This story was written for the Literotica 2023 Summer Lovin' Contest and for the 2023 Crime and Punishment Event. It is an expansion of m
y
2023 750 Word Event
story with a similar name. Please read and give me some feedback, good bad or otherwise.
______________________________
SATURDAY EVENING
All is Not What It Appears
If Steve Anderson had a complaint about the Treasure Coast of Florida, it would be the heat. The heat was overwhelming, and being a transplant to Florida Steve was told often enough, "it's not the heat, it's the humidity." He was sure it was the heat, but he let the natives taunt him because taunting newcomers is their favorite sport. How do you tell a native-born Floridian? You don't have to, they will eventually tell you.
This is a different world than anything Steve Anderson was used to; he was raised on a farm on the Upper Peninsula of Michigan where the snow and the cold reigned for half of the year. Now the snow-covered forests of his youth gave way to sun blessed swampland and beaches, or should I say beach. Florida truly has only one beach, it's over one thousand three hundred miles long, it starts at the Atlantic coast of Georgia in the northeast and winds its way all around Florida and doesn't stop until it reaches the gulf coast of Alabama. The coastline of Florida is beautiful and seductive, and its siren song drew Steve to its pure white sands. Steve tried chasing beach bunnies for a while, he even learned to surf, and he liked every minute of it, but that interfered with work, and Steve truly loved his work. There's something about physical therapy that has always been attractive to him. Helping injured people regain a normal life, helping to ease chronic pain, helping to fight back the ravages of time, it was all wonderful to him.
After serving his country as a field medic, Steve returned to school at the University of Florida in Gainesville FL (GO GATORS!) and once the nightmares of licenses and certifications were straightened out Steve found that there was a lot of work here in Florida or what is also called "God's Waiting Room." His reputation for physical therapy became so good that he was being asked for by name, and the dream of being able to work at patients' homes without direct supervision of a doctor eventually became a reality. Then one day
she
called Mercy General and said that a friend told a friend who told her that Steve Anderson was a miracle worker, and could she get an appointment with him? It's rumored that a large donation to the hospital had occurred, this woman wanted Steve.
Steve was working in "The Dungeon," the name that the patients gave to the Physical Therapy gymnasium because PT
really
stands for Pain and Torture. (The PT therapists and nurses
lived
for Halloween thanks to those titles.) The RN for his group found him in his tiny closet called a "work room" where the therapists did their research and reporting between appointments. She handed him a tablet and said "Here you go Steve, Mrs. D'Amato asked for you by name. She's a sweetie, so be nice."
Steve looked at her chart and slumped, spinal damage after being run over on a Manhattan sidewalk. A car jacker lost control of the car that he killed another woman to steal and hit Mr. and Mrs. D'Amato while they were visiting Manhattan. Guiseppi D'Amato didn't make it, and neither did the carjacker. D'Amato died in the arms of the woman he loved, and the carjacker died doing something he loved most of all - heroin. A broken, shattered Annamaria Giacinta Bellini-D'Amato was left on that frigid Manhattan sidewalk to try to continue her life and raise her daughters alone.
But that's just the beginning, the last dozen pages of her report were merely a rehash of her main complaint - multiple sclerosis. The poor woman ignored the warning signs of MS as merely GERD and the ravages of losing the love of her life had on her mind and body. As Steve was reviewing the doctor's recommendations for Mrs. D'Amato a young volunteer tapped on his work room door and said, "Mrs. D'Amato is here, I have her on bench number four."
"Thanks Grace, I'll be right there." He pulled on a work-out jacket grabbed the tablet and headed over to therapy bench number four where he found a smiling woman who appeared to be in her mid-forties, maybe fifty making Steve doubt the hospital records that put her age at sixty one. Maria D'Amato appeared to be in very good shape for her age, long flowing black hair done in waves and ringlets, a pretty face with big, warm, brown eyes and a million dollar smile, and Steve was going to have to work very hard to avoid staring at those large breasts of hers. She unzipped her own workout jacket revealing her tight t-shirt and Steve realized that she wasn't going to make avoiding them easy. Then looking further down he saw those metal braces on each leg, and the wrist-cuff crutches, and he realized that they had work to do.
"How ya doin'?" she asked in a barely disguised Brooklyn accent extending a hand. They shook hands and she had an incredibly strong grip which came from years of walking on crutches.
"The question is how are
you
doing, looking at this chart here it shows a startling recovery from what was thought as paralysis."
Maria smiled a sweet, heartwarming smile and said, "If I was paralyzed you wouldn't have seen me, so I put in a little effort so I could see the amazing Steve Anderson."
"Flattery will get you everywhere Mrs. D'Amato, including a long hour of work, can I see what you got?" the young "Yooper" asked with a grin.
"And on first date too!" said Maria with raised eyebrows. "The young man moves fast!"
"I'm just trying to keep up with you ma'am. Now looking at your..."
"Maria."
"Hmm?"
"Maria, my friends call me Maria." There was a very long pause as their eyes met and Steve's mouth went dry. Mrs. D'Amato's eyes were beautiful, expressive, and they were calling to him as she continued, "I would love it if you called me Maria."
"Maria it is, and please call me Steve," and they shook hands again. A bridge was crossed and a patient-therapist bond was created in an instant. "Ok Maria let's take the metalwork off and lay back and lay back on the bench. We're going to do some range of motions."
The first appointment always goes long; the therapist needs to evaluate what the patient can do then compares that with the doctor's expectations. In that very long first appointment while Steve put Maria "through her paces," a friendship began to take shape. "I have all the numbers I need, next time we see each other I'll have a plan of therapy together."
"You medical people, always with the numbers. You convert everything that people are into numbers."
"That's the doctor's job," said Steve, "my job is to convert those numbers into something that makes your life better, like a solid plan of therapy."
<><><><><>ÖŽ<><><><><>
"How did the appointment go?" asked Darlene Colella. Darlene has been Maria's friend and nurse since she was released from the Manhattan hospital where she lived for months after she was run down on that Manhattan sidewalk a week before Christmas. Darlene was Maria's home nurse, a gift from Domonic Calvetta, Maria's and her late husband's employer. She helped Maria with everything including Maria's daughters Giannina (Jeannie) who was twenty two, thirteen years older than the younger Nadia who was nine at the time of her father's death.
Darlene helped not only with Maria's physical needs but was an extra pair of hands to help with Jeannie's wedding which was put off for months due to her father's death and Maria's hospitalization, and Nadia's needs. Nadia was a daddy's girl and she never fully recovered from her father's death. Nadia still insists that it was murder.
"The appointment?" Maria shrugged, "it went," she said and she tried to hide a grin as she put a pot on the stove then swung the pot filler out over it and filled the pot with water.
"We're making a dinner tonight, he must have worked up an appetite," grinned Darlene, then as Maria took a sip from her wine Darlene added, "and a thirst, as the kids would say."
"Oh hush, he's a very nice young man."
"... said the cougar on the prowl," grinned Darlene as she took the marinara and a block of parmesan out of the refrigerator.
"When we were done he gave me a leg and foot massage," said Maria, trying not to blush.
"Rrrroooowwww! Fffft! Ffffft!" exclaimed Darlene clawing the air like a cat.
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Steve Anderson set the que ball on the "kitchen line" close to the right rail, gave it a bit of top English to drive it through the balls then let fly with the que stick. With a solid crack the queue ball hit the formation of 15 balls between the second and third rows and drove its way in, striking the 8 ball and driving it toward the pocket. The 15 balls all scattered madly, the 8 ball nearly pocketed which would have won the game for Steve. "Not this time Captain," said Bruce McLaren, as the 8 ball stopped in front of the left corner pocket. "But you probably did fuck me over," he said as he studied the table. "What's with the shit eating grin?"