Gus Wilson watched the
smoke from his pipe drift indolently toward the ceiling while Doc Tandy
poured another round of coffee.
"You know, Gus," the Doc was saying, "I'm glad you came over. I haven't sat
down for a good bull session like this for a long time. A man gets tired of
talking and thinking with 60-buck words and medical terms. I couldn't have
prescribed a better medicine for this old carcass of mine."
"Well, heck, Doc, I'm tickled pink to see you standing still for a change,"
Gus savored the hot coffee. "When was your last vacation?"
"Long ago," Doc shrugged. "There aren't enough doctors in town as it is. But
I'm used to it. I should think you have pretty much the same problem, Gus."
"At least I usually get away for a week or two each year."
The phone rang softly on Doc Tandy's desk.
"See what I mean? Even on Sunday." The snow-haired man smiled and went to
answer it.
Gus stirred his coffee slowly and stared through the window at the budding
leaves on the trees outside.
"Looks like I'll have to interrupt this enjoyable session to soothe a pet
hypochondriac of mine. Bill Williams, up on Waltham Road. Claims he's dying
of appendicitis, and between you and me, he's been dying of it off and on
for several years. Bill's a bachelor, and I'll lay odds he's just got a dose
of his own cooking again! Want to go along? It'll be a pleasant drive if
nothing else."
"Sure, Doc. Why not?"
"Let me get my bag. I've got some bellyache medicine in it that makes castor
oil taste like maple syrup in comparison! Bill is one of those people who
thinks medicine has to taste horrible to be any good."
They went out to the driveway and climbed into a battered 1940 sedan. As Doc
backed her out, he said, "Glad to have you along, Gus. I don't trust this
old heap, but my wife's gone visiting in the new car, the one I usually
drive on calls."
After three-quarters of an hour of peaceful driving, Doc eased on the brakes
and turned off onto Williams' road. He stopped in front of a porch cluttered
with hounds.
"This is it. I'll be out in a minute, Gus."
Doc Tandy fixed a serious expression on his face, straightened his coat,
picked up his bag, and winked at Gus before walking up the front steps.
Five minutes passed, and then 10 before Doc came out again. When he did, his
stern expression wasn't for the benefit of his patient. It was white and
real in his face.
"Gus, can you help me move him to the car? It's not his imagination this
time - it's acute appendicitis. Another hour and it'll burst."
Gus scrambled out of the car and followed Doc Tandy inside to a dimly lit
bedroom. Bill Williams lay doubled up on an old brass-headed bed.
"Ease him into this chair, Gus. It'll be less rough on him than for us to
try to carry him stretched out. Move slowly and gently. Okay, easy now . .
.easy . . .don't try to straighten him out."
Step by step, they carried the sick man to the car, and Doc made him as
comfortable as possible in the back seat.
"You drive, Gus. I'll stay back here and keep an eye on him."
Gus turned the car around, and began the nerve-racking business of avoiding
every bump in the road without losing time.
"You say we've got only an hour, Doc?"
"That's just a guess. It could last another day without breaking. But I have
a feeling it won't take that long. Hope I'm wrong."
"What happens if it does break?"
"Peritonitis, Gus." Doc leaned close from the back seat. "Poison spreads
through his whole system. Have to act fast or . . . well, it can be fatal."
Gus concentrated on his driving and tried not to think about it.
They came to a steep hill a short time later, and halfway up, a cow began
crossing the road.
"Probably been standing there all day, waiting for a car to come along," Gus
said wryly, and slowed down. "Never have seen it to fail."
When the ambling animal reached the other side, Gus stepped on the gas, but
the surge of power wasn't there. The car faltered and stalled. Gus pulled on
the brake, and hit the starter button. The starter failed to work.
"Oh no!" Doc groaned. "Not again! Not at a time like this."
"Had starter trouble before?" "Yes, once, a couple of weeks ago. Then it
went away. I should have known better than to trust it! What are we going to
do?"
Gus climbed out and lifted the hood with nervous fingers. It was a bad time
for this to happen, with a sick man in the car.
Gus knew why the car had stalled. He had felt flat spots even in slow
acceleration since they left the farm. The carburetor was set far too lean.
But that had nothing to do with the starter. The battery was good and
strong, and yet, when the starter button was pressed, nothing happened.
"Doc, your carburetor was set too lean. But I can't adjust it until I find
out what's wrong with the starter and get the engine going."
Doc shook his head helplessly. He was busy keeping Williams calmed down. Gus
started looking for trouble.
He examined the starter motor first. No loose connections; no bare wires.
Without tool, he couldn't take the motor apart, but from what he could see,
and from what he remembered of its sound back in Doc's garage and in the
farmyard, there was nothing wrong with it. Starter motors were a pretty
durable commodity.
He traced the wires to the battery, and still found nothing. From there he
went along the maze of wires to the starter button on the dash.
"Gus, we can't wait much longer. I was too optimistic. This man's condition
is getting worse."
"One second more, Doc." He leaned under the dash and looked at the switch.
Nothing. His mind flashed rapidly back over the situation. Press the starter
button and nothing happened except the clicking of the solenoid. The
starter motor itself had seemed all right before. A bad one always sounds or
feels different - a looseness, a hesitation, a certain sloppy, grinding edge
in the way it turns the engine over. The wiring was in good condition. He
had spent possibly five minutes checking it over and there was nothing to be
found.
"I'm stumped, Doc. Maybe another car will come along soon."
"Forget about getting to the hospital. We'll have to take him back to the
farm. No phone within walking distance, and no time to wait for an ambulance
anyway. We've got to get back some way."
"The farm . . ."
"I'll have to operate there. There's no other choice."
"Okay. I'll see if I can't push us around and start down the hill. Maybe we
can get her going that way."
Gus put a shoulder to the car, turned the wheel and began pushing. It was
hard, working against the pull of the hill, but the car began to move
slowly, to turn, and then to roll.
Gus hopped in and pointed her down the road. He put the car in gear, heard a
loud click and then the beautiful sound of the engine catching hold.
"Okay, Doc. I think we're all right now!"
"Thank heaven! Now get us to that farm as quickly as you can. We've only got
a few minutes at most."
If Gus had ever experienced a nightmare in broad daylight, this was it. He
gripped the wheel hard, trying to make time and yet avoid every bump in the
road - and prayed that they would make it.
When they came at last to Williams' place, Gus swung the car gently off the
road into the farmyard full of barking hounds. This one was truly a stumper.
Gus had no idea what was causing the trouble.
After he checked out the trouble, he found that the car only needed a little
work. He heard the click when the car started rolling down the hill. He used
that as a reference. He checked it out and found that one part of the engine
was in contact with the starter gear when the car was on level road or going
up a hill. When the car was going down the hill, the car would start because
that part of the engine was not in contact with the starter.
"Did you hear a click when you started rolling down the hill?" he asked the
Doc.
"Yes I did; I didn't know what it was. It was like the clicks I hear all the
time," Doc said.
"Well, that click should have given me a clue right away. I didn't have much
time to figure it out until I checked over the motor and starter. Know what
it was?" Gus asked the Doc.
Doc shook his head. "I know nothing about a car - I only work on humans,
Gus."
"Well, your car is playing Russian Roulette. You need some work done on your
starter. It's like a worn tooth. If the car part that needs work done on it
gets in touch with your starter gear when the car is in idle, you need to
turn the motor off to get it to start again. You see, it jams up. Your
solenoid is what causes the clicking. Usually a little push or bouncing it
back and forth will start your car again."
"I'm confused, but I'll take your word for it."
"Well, the car won't give you anymore trouble tonight, but there's no point
risking another stall. I'll pickup a new flywheel for you in the morning."
After Doc started the engine and gave gas to the motor, ran it for a few
minutes until he was satisfied that it was all right, he turned and gave a
wave to Gus as Gus stoked up his pipe.
"I'd better go and have a look at my patient. He'll be in dreamland pretty
soon. Why don't you take up my offer?"
"What offer, Doc?"
"You could join me in the medical profession. You pack a pretty mean ether
bottle!"
"Next time you decide to pay a visit to one of your so-called
hypochondriacs, go yourself. I've had enough. Give me a garage full of
broken-down cars any time. I'd rather have the smell of good old gasoline
than ether when you do an emergency surgery!"
END |