The Archaeology of Abandoned Ambition in the Dental Drawer
Thorne is currently kneeling on the cold linoleum of his secondary storage closet in Birmingham, his knees making a dull, clicking sound that reminds him he is exactly . He isn’t supposed to be here. He’s supposed to be in Operatory 2, prepping a crown, but his assistant mentioned they were low on size-medium nitrile gloves, and Thorne has always been the kind of man who needs to see the deficit for himself.
He finds the gloves, but shoved behind a stack of unopened printer paper is a box that hasn’t seen the light of day since . It’s an endodontic starter kit. The shrink-wrap is so thick with dust it feels like felt.
The Thursday Promise
He remembers the day he bought it. It was a rainy Thursday in , and he’d just finished a continuing education course that promised him he could “take his practice to the next level” by keeping root canals in-house. He’d spent $2,496 on this kit, convinced that by Monday morning, he would be a different kind of clinician. He wasn’t just buying nickel-titanium files and a specialized motor; he was buying a version of Elias Thorne that didn’t have to refer out the
