Science Fiction
Water Park
Obstetrician
Psychological Weakness - allowing herself to be under the thumb of her parents
Psychological Need - to learn to live her own path
Moral Weakness - thinks she made a wrong decision becoming a doctor
Moral Need - learn to love being a doctor again
Desire - wants to forget about being a doctor
Opponent - husband, child, pregnant woman
Plan - make it to the bottom, then get her to a hospital
Battle - battling the waves and turns of the water slide.
Self-revelation - She does want to be a doctor, just not a surgeon.
New equilibrium - Switches to the Obstetrician residency
Viewpoint: First Person - Flashback
Designing Principle: On the journey down a colossal lazy river, glory hungry surgical intern discovers her true calling when she's forced to deliver a baby in an inflatable raft while going over rapids.
Some people stumble into their true calling, while for others, like me, it runs over with a Mack truck.
I had decided I wasn't going back after lunar vacation. I'd spent the majority of my twenties with my nose in books studying to become what my father had dreamt for me. I deserved a vacation. I deserved to go places, and see moons, and visit other planets. I deserved this trip.
"Water park planet are for children, Quin," my father would say, not seeing the irony in exclaiming such a thing to an eight-year-old. And now, twenty years later, I find Europa more incredible than I had ever dreamt as a child. Thousand-foot water slides. Wave pools that rivaled Earth oceans. And the main attraction, The Lazy Mississippi, a towering helix of tubing three miles long and a thousand stories tall. "Such a waste," father had called it.
The planet Europa was a scientific marvel. Jupiter's smallest moon, and thickly covered in dense layers of ice, it was the first moon to be nudged. It's common practice now, but the math was all theoretical back then. Scientists weren't sure if the moon would break up exiting Jupiter's orbit, or if they'd get something wrong and the moon would careen out into space, never to be seen again. But the nudge worked, and as Europa fell into orbit with the sun, about a third of the way from Earth and Venus, the ice melted into the spectacular water world it is now. And although the gravitational pull of Earth's momentum on Europa can caused heavy storms, it was nothing but beautiful blue skies at the top of The Lazy Mississipii right now.
I rode the single rider line, so I didn't have to wait at the top for very long and was thankful for that. The air was so much thinner, I could feel my lungs fighting to keep up. I had asthma as a child and the feeling was similar. I was put in a raft with a family of four, a husband, wife, and a small boy, Dayna, Edgur, and little Vynn from Jupiter's mist moon Enceladus. The forth member of their family "Is due two weeks from Tuesday," Dayna said, "That'd be my sister's birthday, wouldn't that just be great?" I smiled. She was nice. If you ask me, though, she looked ready to pop any second now.
Soon after the teen lifeguard nudged our raft over the first fall, Dayna had her first contraction. God, I hate being right. There was a considerable amount of water in the bottom of the raft from the swishing and slouching, but Dayna seemed confident that her water had broken and the baby was coming. "Oh god, oh god, I knew this was a bad idea. I knew it! Oh, baby, I'm so sorry!" the husband said, losing his grip. "What do we do? Help!" I wondered who he was yelling for as I unlatched my safety harness and pushed the bar over my head. "Hey. Hey, it's going to be okay, alright?" I crawled out into to the center of the octagonal raft as we gradually sloshed along the slow, winding switchback. "I'm a surgical intern on Earth," I tried to explain, but Edgur's panic trampled over me. "We can't do this here. We can't! Please, we gotta get off! We want off! Let us off!" he yelled, as if the pimple-faced life guard could just hit the breaks on a hundred thousand gallons of rushing water so they could exit the ride.
"Sir!" I used my doctor voice, clear and strict. "I need you to calm down." My father's voice rang in my ear, "Panic is the body's natural response to the absence of choice." I looked him in the eye, "Edgur, right? Well I'm a doctor, Edgur," Which wasn't technically true, but useful for quelling nerves. "Everything's going to be okay." This pulled Edgur from the edge, "You're a doctor? Oh god," He said, throwing his hands to up to give praise to heavens above, "Thank you, God, thank you!" Which, honestly, irked me a little. God hadn't missed out on doing keg floats to study, I had. "So you've done this before? Delivered a baby? So you know what you're doing then, right?" he asked. I'd always believed in telling my patients the truth, regardless of feelings or circumstance. Father had spoken at length of the slippery slope that would lead a surgeon down. "Well, no and yes." I said. "No I've never delivered a baby, but yes I know how it goes." The look on Edgur's face made it clear that "knowing how it goes" wasn't the answer he was hoping for. "Oh God, oh God," he repeated, raking his hand across his face with worry.
"Daddy-y-y," little Vynn sobbed. Tears ran down his little cheeks as they rounded another switchback, water splashing over the side of the boat. Vynn erupted in harsh shrieks and cried as the boat rocked heavily. "It's okay, buddy! It's okay!" Edgur said. "Mommy's going to be okay!" But the fear in his voice was undeniable. And he had reason to fear. The Lazy Mississippi was a fun filled adventure for the family, filled with leisurely, winding switchbacks, a stretch of four-star white water rapids, and the big finale, a forty-foot pool plunge over a rushing waterfall. What the hell were these yokels doing on this ride in the first place? I wondered. Three miles took a couple hours, she'd have to help Dayna no push until they could get her out. "And if the baby doesn't wait?" my father's proposed in my mind.
It wasn't long before Dayna's contractions were close enough to count between. We counted and breathed together. "That's it, Dayna, hold on, okay? We're going to get you to a hospital, just don't push." Dayna breathed heavy between contractions. They were less than thirty seconds a part now. "I don't think I can." Dayan said, clutching at her stomach around the thick pullover bar of safely harness. "Ohhhh. This baby wants to come out now, like right now, right now!" she yelled over the rush of the water. The raft was picking up speed, which meant we were coming close to the rapids now. God, had we been out here that long already? I thought. "One more hour, Dayna. One more, you can do this, just don't push." Dayna moaned, "I can't! I-- OHH!" I soon realized she wasn't going last another hour.
"Dayna! We need to get you out of that harness," I yelled over the water. Dayna clung tightly to the bars, holding them down. "No, no, please, no! I don't want to fall out!" she cried, her hair flapping in her face, tears rolling down her cheeks. "Dayna! You have to listen to me, you can't have this baby sitting down. We need to get you on your back." The Vynn's side of the raft lifts in the air and then crashes down the other side of the rapid, a wave of water slapping against them. I slid and banged against Edgur's legs, pain shot through my spine, but to my surprise, I felt him grab ahold of my of the back of my shirt like his wife's life depended on it. "OH!" Dayna cried. The boat crashed against another wave and I slid again, only I brace myself this time. "Come on, Dayna, you can do this! We can do this together!" I shouted. The last bit seemed to get through to her. "Yeah, that's right. Me and you, Dayna. I'm in this with you, all the way." And I wasn't lying. If Dayna fell out, I would too. But I pushed the thought from my mind, I couldn't think about that then. I knew it was a risk, but the baby was coming, and she couldn't have it in that chair.
"Okay," Dayna said, shivering with fright. She unbuckles her belt and pulled up the safety bar, when suddenly, as the raft ricocheted off a boulder and was sent spinning like a top. "Dayna!" Edgur yells. In his panic, he lets go of my shirt and I tumble tail over teakettle and bang against my original chair. Dayna dangled from her seat beat before it slips from her hands and she slides across the raft. I manage to get my footing enough to push off, catch her, and cushion her fall. Only this time the impact of metal was against my hand instead of my back. Pain shot through my hand, and the first thought that raced through my mind was, My hand is broken, the bones are shattered, now I can't be a surgeon. And the most incredible sense of relief washed over me, a weight I had carried since childhood, a weight my father had proudly placed on my shoulders. It was gone. Only, the pain soon subsided. I flexed my hand and it hurt, but I could flex it. Which meant, it would bruise for sure, but my future as a surgeon was still intact. Although, looking back, I think I knew even then, that I wouldn't carry that burden, my father's burden, again.
Edgur grabbed hold of his wife and held her as I clung to her feet and spread myself out on my stomach, both feet pressed against the raft walls. "OHHHH God, it's coming!" Dayna screamed. It seemed as if she was in sync with the rapids, the more she screamed and pushed the more the raft dipped and shook and crashed us against waves and rocks. I could see the baby's head crowning through the near constant splash of white water. Dayna pushed and screamed and the waves roared. His head. His neck. I braced myself, holding onto Dayna's legs as the raft rocked up... His torso. His... Her. Her feet. And I placed the most beautiful baby girl into her mother's arms, just as our raft went over the waterfall.
When I came up for air, it had been a month. Dayna and Edgur named their baby girl Quin. I'd been accepted into the OB/GYN internship program. And to my surprise, my father wasn't angry for not becoming what he'd dreamt for me. "Never in my life," he told me, "Have I been more proud."