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#tai … i love her. lilith also loves her
possibilistfanfiction · 4 months
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anything surgeons au, especially butch!bea omg
[an accidental 2.7k words of baby tai for the culture]
//
you don’t ask for beatrice to consult on the case just because the baby really does look like her in a tangible way: brown eyes that shine in the sun; gold skin; soft dark hair; a happy smile. tai — an orphan, which you also don’t prioritize when you ask her, but whatever — is small for her three months and quite sick, a bad valve in her tiny heart doing more damage than good. 
it’s a difficult surgery, complicated and intricate and, even though you’re the best in your field, a hardcore rockstar, you’re not a cardio surgeon. you ask beatrice to consult on the case because, even if you’d never admit it aloud in front of her, she is the best in the world.
‘dr. villaumbrosia,’ beatrice says, meeting you outside the picu. she’s not operating today, you’re fairly certain, or at least hasn’t yet, based on her neat navy slacks and oatmeal-colored sweater under her white coat, chelsea boots certainly not what she would wear in the OR, her buzzed hair not hidden under one of her surgical caps, her wedding band still on her finger rather than tucked away, pinned to the inside of her scrubs. you’ve known her for years and years, have watched her fail and succeed and succeed and succeed, have watched her fall in love and get married, have watched her build a home, a life — which includes you, in all the ways that matter, in the ways you will very rarely thank each other for and feel anyway. 
but still, ‘dr. choi,’ you say, ‘thanks for coming.’
she nods. ‘it sounded like an interesting case from your summary.’ she takes the ipad you offer her and looks at the scans of tai’s heart, then her vitals, then the scans again, a little closer and with something like wonder filling her eyes, just at the corners but enough for you to feel a spark of hope in your chest. she looks up at you. ‘we can do this, i think.’
‘yeah?’
‘it’ll be —‘ she pauses, nods to reassure both of you, sets her shoulders, and you know that’s it — ‘it’ll be difficult, but it’s not impossible.’
‘agreed.’
‘can i meet her, then? the patient? i’d like to get an idea of how small this heart actually is.’ 
‘of course.’ you open the door and it’s just like any other consult; beatrice is always brave enough to partner up on any peds cases, even the most heartbreaking, the most hopeless. 
tai smiles at beatrice, who is always good with children the same way you are: you talk to them like human beings, and you listen, and you take things seriously — their pain and their fear and their recovery. tai is too little to tell you anything, but beatrice still leans toward her gently and smiles at her babbling, runs a gentle hand over her soft hair, makes sure to warm the head of her stethoscope up on her thigh before pressing it to tai’s chest. 
there’s no way for you to realize it at the time, but you will swear for years that you knew, even before beatrice and certainly before ava, that tai was special; beatrice closes her eyes and listens to tai’s failing heart carefully. ‘i’ll need an updated echo,’ she tells you and your intern, standing uselessly behind you. ‘and then, if you’re free afterward, dr. villambrosia, let’s meet in the skills lab? i’d like to run through the procedure.’
‘that works for me.’
she nods once, seriously. ‘no parents?’
you shake your head. ‘she’s here through my org, from chengdu.’
beatrice considers this briefly but soldiers on, like she and ava haven’t had quiet, sad fights about children and adoption and a family and a home. ‘if you feel comfortable, i can hand off my follow-ups this afternoon to dr. amunet and we can get this taken care of. it’ll be a long recovery, so i’d rather it not degrade any further if we wait.’
‘as long as the run-through feels good,’ you say, ‘i think it’s the best course of treatment.’
beatrice nods, smiles once down at tai and rubs her little chest while tai squirms and babbles happily. for such a sick kid — on oxygen and a feeding tube, two ivs because her veins are so small — she’s generally happy, bright in a way that peds usually isn’t. she’s not guaranteed to survive so, like all of your patients, you don’t get too attached. beatrice hasn’t had that problem before, either, caring but not too much, unlike ava, who feels each loss as if it’s his own. but the way that beatrice lingers and lets tai hold onto her fingers while she tells your intern exactly what she wants from the ekg and bloodwork — you think this might be different. 
/
it’s touch and go for a while: you and beatrice are brilliant surgeons but, even with all of the tests and scans and practice, tai’s surgery is longer and more difficult than you could’ve prepared for: her heart is weak and so, so small; even beatrice struggles to place the careful, clever sutures you’ve watched her throw with ease, most surgeries, and for years. it takes longer than you would’ve liked to get her off bypass, much longer than you would’ve liked for her heart to start beating again in beatrice’s hands. 
but: it does beat. weak and small, yes, but sure, and steady, and even, all the valves and ventricles ready to heal as they should be. tai’s cheeks, once she’s settled in the picu again, are rosy, her skin warm, her oxygen sats already up comfortably from before. you’d wired her sternum shut and the incision running down her tiny chest will leave a scar, and she’ll probably need another procedure or two as she gets older — but she will get older, as far as you can tell. 
beatrice goes through — a little unexpected for the aftermath of a successful surgery, and far beyond the end of her relatively easy scheduled shift — all of the potential complications tai could face, how she was without a flow of properly oxygenated blood to her brain for an amount of time that frustrated her — maybe even frightened her. for as long as you’ve known beatrice — dr. choi — through undergrad and medical school, then residency and fellowships, into your first few years as attendings, she’s as unflappable as they come, unless it’s someone she loves who might be hurt, who might not get well. you’ve seen it with ava and her back, and shannon and mary after a car accident that looked much worse than it actually was, and even one time camila got the flu. 
it surprises you in the moment when beatrice, carefully taking off her scrub cap — patterned with little otters and rainbows, a ridiculous gift from ava that beatrice horrifically wears with not a single ounce of hesitation or embarrassment — slips into her hospital-issued fleece quarterzip and sits down in the chair by tai’s bassinet once you and the nurses get all of her machines situated. 
‘i’ll stay with her, dr. villaumbrosia,’ beatrice says, soft and formal.
‘there’s plenty of nurses, and dr. amunet, if you want to go home.’
beatrice shakes her head and leans over tai’s sleeping form, heavily sedated for the next few days so she’s not in pain, and runs a gentle finger along her cheek. ‘she — she doesn’t have anyone,’ she says, as much explanation as you need. ‘plus, dr. silva is on call tonight anyway.’
you resist the urge to say something mean about ava; he’s actually very talented and smart and he makes your best friend, your sister, very happy, and very full — even if he is the most annoying person you know. tai is alone, and all beatrice has to go home to, right now, is a beautiful house that’s empty of all of the life ava brings anywhere, leftovers in the fridge, a house that you know has an empty bedroom just down the hall from the primary, holding a lot of ava’s patient, quiet hope in the space.
‘okay,’ you say, not bothering her, just this once: tai is very small and still very sick; you’ve read enough studies to know that comfort, especially with babies who haven’t known as much of it as they should, can be extremely monumental in their ability to heal. ‘i’m sure you can handle if anything pops up, but i’d like to know anyway. text me.’
beatrice looks up from tai to nod, a grim smile on her face mellowed, seemingly, by tai’s steady breaths against beatrice’s palm. ‘will do.’
you nod and don’t bother to ask for anything else from her, taking your leave while she takes her glasses off and rubs her eyes, then slumps a little in the chair but keeps her hand on tai’s stomach, soothing and warm and present. tai has been alone her entire life, even if it’s only been very short; you believe that her body will know that she’s not anymore, at least for now.
/
it’s not often that you choose to come to work early, not often that you allow yourself to have much attachment to patients and their outcomes beyond whether or not you practiced the best medicine possible — no one would be able to do peds and neonatal surgery if they did — but you park far before the sun comes up and force yourself to grab three cups of coffee from the cafe before you head to the picu.
it doesn’t surprise you when you see both beatrice and ava by tai’s bassinet now, beatrice fast asleep, slumped over fully on ava’s shoulder, and ava scrolling through an ipad, probably taking care of charting here rather than in her office. ava smiles up at you, never deterred by your grumbling or eye rolls, and, just this once, you smile back.
‘dr. silva,’ you greet. ‘how’s she doing?’ you ask, handing him the coffee.
‘totally steady all night,’ ava says quietly, sounding far too proud of a baby that isn’t even really beatrice’s patient, let alone theirs. ‘she’s really strong, even if she’s small.’
you look over tai’s vitals from the past night quickly and it’s true, she is getting better even faster than you could’ve hoped. ‘she is.’
ava smiles, then looks over at a fast asleep beatrice, a little aching. ’bea said she’s an orphan?’
you sit down next to them both and nod; you assume beatrice gave ava enough of the details. ‘we’ll work to place her with a good family once she’s recovered well.’ the warning is unspoken: don’t get too attached.
ava looks over at beatrice, who has spent the entire night asleep in the picu over a baby whose heart she massaged until it beat again in her hands. he nods. ‘yeah,’ he says, hopeful despite it all. ‘yeah.’
/
‘i — i can do it.’
‘dr. choi.’
‘no,’ beatrice says, ‘it’s fine. i’m on call tonight, and it’s good for her.’
it is, you both know it, but tai is healing and, if all goes according to plan, will be released in a week or two, hopefully to a family who’s equipped to care for her, to raise her gently and generously and well. beatrice — and ava, whenever they make up a very flimsy excuse — have been in tai’s room often, and you know they’ve grown attached even though you warned them not to. but beatrice taking her scrub top off and picking tai up gently, careful of her leads and her still-tender chest, and then holding her close and settling into a rocking chair. 
‘beatrice,’ you say, sitting down across from her. 
‘have you — has there been a family chosen?’
you’re not the one in charge of any of that, your contributions to the organization being both your sixth-generation-surgeon money and your sixth-generation-surgeon talent, but you know there hasn’t been a decision made yet. you shake your head. 
she nods. ‘we…’ she swallows, readjusts so tai is held even closer, her left ear close to beatrice’s heart. ‘i spoke with ava. a lot, actually. and, well, you obviously know i’m chinese; i can teach her how to speak mandarin and make mapo doufu and she won’t — she won’t miss that part. and ava knows about not having a family of origin, and he’s, like, the best. and,’ she continues, ‘we’re both surgeons. you know she’s going to need care now, but also her whole life, and i — i fixed her heart.’ she can’t even look at you, just looks at tai’s peaceful little face as her voice gets wobbly and she sniffles. 
beatrice, above all, means what she says. she’s maybe one of the least impulsive people you’ve ever met, agonizing for as long as you’ve known her over haircuts and new hiking gear and dinner reservations, as methodical as it comes when she practices medicine. 
‘i —‘ she looks at tai once more and then takes a deep breath and meets your eyes. ‘i love her.’
you know, more than anything, ava has made beatrice want to be brave. you let it sink in, let it hit you like a tidal wave of easy warmth, then really let yourself look at your oldest friend and every careful thing about her, lean muscles and long-healed scars, the most careful thing held against her chest — the same skin, bathed in the light of an easy sunrise. ‘well okay then.’
beatrice seems surprised, for a moment, as if you would say no, or doubt her, or discourage or argue. ‘really?’
you nod, brusque mostly so you don’t cry. ‘i’ll connect you with aja; she’ll be able to help you with all the paperwork. i’ll put in my recommendation, of course.’
beatrice adjusts tai so she can free a hand to wipe a few tears. ‘thank you, lilith.’
‘let’s just hope she takes after you, not ava.’
beatrice laughs, and it makes tai smile.
/
‘no.’
‘she’s —‘
‘your daughter,’ you say. ‘you’re not tai’s doctor any longer, haven’t been in months.’
beatrice frowns, arms crossed. ava smiles far too serenely for your liking next to her.
‘she’ll be fine, babe,’ she says. ‘it’s just a post-op, super normal.’ she turns toward tai, happily squealing at a nurse playing peak-a-boo with her while they get her situated on the exam table. 
beatrice glowers but concedes, softening immediately when ava squeezes her bicep. they’re both definitely exhausted but happier than you could’ve really imagined; the empty bedroom now filled with a plethora of toys and clothes, colorful animals on the walls, a safe crib with a space mobile you’d personally given them. it makes sense to you, easily, that they’re good parents — kind and attentive and funny — even if, right now, they’re driving you insane. they’re both in comfortable clothes, not bothering with anything more on their shared day off. 
you have to physically shoo beatrice away as you’re listening to tai’s heart, which is ridiculous because you’re sure beatrice does it at home, probably every night. you’re more relieved than you would ever let on that her heartbeat is normal and steady — perfect, as far as you’re concerned. you go through the rest of her check-up and she’s as healthy as can be, gaining weight well, rolling over, holding her head up, starting to eat baby food — yes to bananas; no to green beans so far — not sleep regressing as much as they’d feared. 
‘she’s doing great,’ you reassure. 
‘fuck yeah she is,’ ava says, then sighs. ‘before either of you start, first of all, language is all relative.’
‘ava, we can’t have her first word being f—‘
‘— secondly,’ ava interrupts, then looks at beatrice putting tai back into her dinosaur onesie, slipping a warm cap onto her head, ‘she’s the best baby of all time.’
‘she is wonderful,’ beatrice says, still a little reverent.
ava elbows you as beatrice carefully pulls socks onto tai’s feet. ‘one of the better ones i’ve met,’ you concede, because you really do love tai, and, all things considered, she’s an easy, happy baby. ‘certainly better than i thought would be possible with either of you.’
ava rolls her eyes. ‘i read your recommendation.’ horrifyingly, she starts reciting it, so you move as quickly as you can.
‘i have a tight schedule today,’ you interrupt, beatrice laughing quietly, smiling at both of you with far too much amusement.
‘bye lil,’ she says. ‘thanks for everything.’
‘yeah, yeah,’ you say, but there’s no bite to it. ‘see you at dinner.’
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bootay-hole · 2 months
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more of my doodles from school FEATURINGGGGG my ocs that i’ve never talked about and also some random designs i drew bc school is boring 👍
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strawberrytalia · 6 months
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okay gonna share my takes on the hated dc questions bc i’m bored lol:
1. Choose a Robin to never have existed: I’m gonna go with Tim lmao. I know narratively he had the longest run, but I can’t choose any of the others so bye bye timmy
2. Only keeping Flash and WW comics because they have the most interesting lore in my opinion, and better casts. I mean I like bat characters, but the actual batman storylines don’t interest me as much. Same for superman.
3. Bruce has 5 children in canon. Duke is just a little guy who gets extra privileges (lmao i’m joking it’s 6 kids, although i view duke being unconventional for many reasons)
4. I AM NOT CREATIVE ENOUGH LMAO tbh wonder woman characters are so interesting, i can’t top that.
5. I really like the New Titans lineup, especially with Lilith, Vic, Karen.
6. Worst batman writer: GOD this is hard but right off the top of my head I really hate Zdarsky’s writing. Like rn i really hate it, i think he does jason and bruce such a disservice.
7. Opinion on YJ cartoon: It’s fine if you just focus on the first 2 seasons and view it like an alternate spin off that has nothing to do with comics (although my eye twitches at kon and m’gann). But after that, they do way too much and it’s just a clusterfuck of a show. S4 was so confusing and I won’t forgive them for characterizing Lor Zod! Actually overall it’s annoying that they stole the YJ name but did a huge disservice to Kon, Tim, and Cassie (Bart isn’t as bad as them) so I do share in the annoyance with yj comic fans.
8. Main batfam is Bruce, Dick, Tim, Steph, Cass, Damian, Duke, Alfred.
9. Which non-canon book I consider canon? I do like Green Lantern: Legacy because Tai’s character is so sweet and I think he has potential. Also he and Keli need to be friends!
10. Worst artist: Anyone who whitewashes Connor is a no-go for me right away. I feel bad naming an artist but yeah.
11. Should’ve stayed dead: I’m sorry but Barry and Hal maybe should stay dead. Actually Hal’s ghost can show up once in a while lol, but their stories were over 😭
12. I don’t have a favorite tom king book lol.
13. I don’t like this man 😭 i’d give him nothing
14. hmmmmm i don’t really have an opinion on dark knight returns
15. Fave Jason: I like classic Jason in UTRH and Lost Days the best. I think his values really shone best in those stories, and he was a nice mix of messy, grieving, and unhinged.
16. Character better in New52 than Pre52: I love that Helena B is a woc! Jackson Hyde and Nubia definitely were written better (aka actually written tbh).
17. Batfam kid’s fave siblings: Dick can’t choose, please don’t make him (it’s btwn tim and dami). Jason’s favorite is Duke. Cass’ favorite is Duke. Damian and Tim’s faves are Dick. Duke’s favorite is Cass.
18. Best supergirl: Ohhh this is a hard question… umm part of me wants to say Kara but a larger part of me is more interested in Cir-El, so i’m gonna go with her.
19. I CANNOT SAY WHOS THE WORST SUPERGIRL
20. I refuse to choose a superboy love interest 😭 these are the worst last two questions
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Essential media tag game
I was tagged by both @universe-on-her-shoulders​ and @dreameater1988​. The rules appear to be recommend favourites in various categories. I chose to skew towards all-time favourites and less so “flash in the pan” current interests:
MOVIES:
Citizen Kane
Casablanca
Frankenstein (1931)
Metropolis (1927)
The Immigrant (Chaplin)
Hawks (1988 - Timothy Dalton, Anthony Edwards)
The Pink Panther Strikes Again
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (Director’s Edition)
The Empire Strikes Back (original version)
Local Hero (a favourite decades before Peter Capaldi became the Doctor)
Home of the Brave (Laurie Anderson concert film)
Swimming to Cambodia (Spalding Gray monologue performance)
True Stories (David Byrne, Talking Heads, John Goodman musical from 1986)
Singin’ in the Rain
That’s Entertainment! Parts 1-3
Superman II (original version)
2001: A Space Odyssey
Casino Royale (both 1967 and 2006 versions)
The Fifth Element
Blade Runner
Brazil
TELEVISION:
The Prisoner (original version with Patrick McGoohan)
MASH
All in the Family
Twin Peaks (original series)
The Six Million Dollar Man/The Bionic Woman (R.I.P.. Richard Anderson 😔)
Wonderfalls (2003 Bryan Fuller fantasy drama)
Battlestar Galactica (2000s)
Corner Gas (Canadian sitcom)
The Beachcombers (Canadian family drama)
Danger Man (a.k.a. Secret Agent)
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Whose Line is it Anyway? (UK and US versions)
Mission: Impossible (original 1960s)
Captain Scarlet the the Mysterons
Game of Thrones
Cosmos (both original and sequel; Carl Sagan, Neil de Grasse Tyson)
Dirty Jobs (Mike Rowe reality series)
The Sarah Jane Adventures
Doctor Who (1963-2015)
Victoria (yes I know this show is still relatively new, but it’s on my list of all-time favourites)
MUSIC:
Bill Haley and His Comets
Enya
Laurie Anderson
Sarah McLachlan
Lorde
Johnny Cash
Bobbie Gentry
Billy Connolly
Chuck Berry
Sister Rosetta Tharpe
Talking Heads
Kirsty MacColl
The Beatles (hit and miss)
Elvis (hit and miss)
The Treniers
Billie Davis (1960s pop singer)
Philip Glass
Lindsey Stirling
Murray Gold (Doctor Who composer)
BOOKS:
Shogun by James Clavell (also Tai-Pan)
1984 by George Orwell
Junky by William S. Burroughs (also Naked Lunch, Roosevelt After Inauguration)
The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson
Cyborg by Martin Caidin
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Star Wars: Splinter of the Mind’s Eye by Alan Dean Foster
Man Descending by Guy Vanderhaeghe
Lilith by George MacDonald
Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll (also Through the Looking Glass)
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
Immortal Queen by Elizabeth Byrd (1950s-era biographical novel about Mary Queen of Scots)
The Ian Fleming James Bond canon (plus Colonel Sun by Robert Markham, a.k.a. Kingsley Amis)
The Leslie Charteris Simon Templar (The Saint) canon
The Peter O’Donnell Modesty Blaise canon
The JK Rowling Harry Potter canon (novels only)
THEATRE:
Einstein on the Beach by Philip Glass and Robert Wilson (2012 revival, Luminato Festival, Toronto)
The Black Rider by Tom Waits, William S. Burroughs and Robert Wilson (late 2000s touring production, Calgary)
Our Town by Thornton Wilder (1991 West End production starring Alan Alda and future Doctor Who actress Jemma Redgrave)
The End of the Moon by Laurie Anderson (one-woman show performed during 2005 High Performance Rodeo festival, Calgary)
Unidentified Human Remains and the True Nature of Love by Brad Fraser (early 2000s production, Calgary)
Tagging anyone who follows me and who wants to make their own recommendations!
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