Richard Keegan and other friends.
“You have hives”
he says “and you carry your right arm as if it were hurt”
“What is hives?” I
ask. Every day I hear new words.
He points to the
right side of my neck. “These are hives” he repeats. “What’s wrong with your
arm?”
“I fell from a
horse and hurt my shoulder” I say. “But our doctor thinks I just hurt it a
little, and it’ll go away”
He examines my
hives again. Then he asks: “May I touch your shoulder?”
“Who are you?” I
ask, just a little suspicious.
“My name is
Richard Keegan, and I am a medical specialist”
There is another
new phrase: Medical specialist. “You are a Doctor?” I ask.
“Not quite” he
replies. “But almost. I am similar to a doctor and I would like to look at your
shoulder.”
He seems alright
so I say: “OK but it hurts, so please touch carefully”
He is in uniform
and carries the insignia of a lieutenant. He probes my shoulder. He pushes a
little, then he pulls a little.
Then he says: “You
have a dislocated shoulder. That’s why you have hives and that’s why you have
pain.”
“Can you fix it?”
I ask.
“Yes, I can, but I
need two of my friends.”
We walk over to
the Café Post, which is now a recreational area for the American troops, along
with the Café Graf. He asks an MP at the entrance: “Have you seen Hank and
Bobby?”
“Yeah” says the MP who must be about 2 meters
tall, “they’re inside. They just got here.”
Richard bids me to
wait in the hallway. He is back in a minute, followed by two other soldiers.
He points to them in turn: “This is Hank, and that’s Bob.” He says and asks:
“What’s your name?” I tell him.
“That’s an unusual
name” he says.
His two helpers
have obviously done this before. They hold me, one around my chest, the other
around my hips.
Richard tests my
shoulder again.
“This is going to
hurt a little” he says. In my mind I call him Dr.Keegan.
He takes my right
arm; just above my elbow and just below my right shoulder. He yanks and twists
a little and shoves a bit. For an instant it hurts like hell. I hold my right
arm at the wrist with my left.
We walk to a Red
Cross truck and Richard gets a green coloured cloth, which he folds into a
sling. He fastens it atop my left shoulder.
My arm is at a
right angle at the elbow. The sling covers my elbow and my hand, and diagonally
rises from the tip of my fingers to my shoulder.
I am telling you
this in such detail, so that you can understand how much space there was inside
this sling, which Richard fills up with chocolate bars, chewing gum, Candies
wrapped in silver and gold paper and more chocolate bars.
I could have
opened a Konditorei.
“Come back
tomorrow” he says. “I will look at your
shoulder once more then.”
Richard Keegan and
I became good friends. I gave him my Hitler Youth knife with the diamond shaped
insert and the Swastika in the middle and on the blade it said: “Blut
und Ehre”. He thought it was too
valuable, but I insisted.
Some months later
he was transferred to the Japanese theatre of war. I never heard from him again.
He had given me his home address, so I wrote to his parents.
But I never heard
from them either.
***********
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