A
poorly-lit, crescent-shaped driveway, sloping gently round and down by the side
of an elegant municipal office. The chestnut trees planted around the garden
arch wetly overhead, back-lit in orange from the neighbouring street. The rain
has stopped, but its echo continues in a fall of water from the saturated
canopy. A dog is barking insistently somewhere – that, and the ambulance and
police car parked a little further ahead, tells us this must be the place. We
turn our vehicle around for a quick getaway, and walk down to meet the crew.
Finally
we see the dog, a black Staffie, wearing a large hooped collar, tied off on
some railings. At the fullest stretch of the lead, it barks once every couple
of seconds, its fat head jerking up and its body recoiling like a howitzer
shelling the area with alarm.
‘Poor
thing’ I say as I pass. It doesn’t even look up.
There
are two drug users in respiratory arrest – lying on their backs sneaker to
sneaker in the arched doorway of a cellar entrance. The two paramedics from the
original truck have had to split up, one per patient. As soon as we say hello
they ask if we’ll take the other.
‘That security
guard found them when he came out to investigate all the barking.’
‘Watch out
for needles. It’s a fucking spike-fest round here.’
I see
one. I pick it up and shove it point down into the raised flower bed behind us
as I go over to take over the bagging of our patient. I press behind his ear
and above his eye to stimulate a response, but he’s way too flat. Behind the
mask his face shines dully in the artificial scene light, like it’s been
roughly pressed out of clay. He breathes with me as I press the bag, timing it
to my own pattern. Rae preps the Narcan. We spend the next quarter of an hour
or so monitoring his progress, bringing him up. Finally, after the third shot,
he starts to show signs. Groaning, he makes a sudden effort to sit up, blindly
batting a hand around his face trying to locate the airway. I pull it out for
him, and he makes a graa-cch kind of sound, like a man fighting his way out of a
swamp. There is a dark patch of liquid spreading around his jeans; at first I
think he’s been incontinent, but when he sits up some more I realise it’s
actually beer.
‘Wha-tha
fok…’
‘It’s
the ambulance. You stopped breathing. How are you doing?’
His head
seems too big for his neck; it flops around as he tries to locate the mechanism
for keeping it up and making words.
His mate
still hasn’t come round sufficiently so the other crew are loading him on the
trolley. Rae helps them, whilst I watch our guy.
‘You’re
the second heroin OD I’ve done in a couple of days,’ I say to him, retrieving
the needle from the flower bed and slotting it into our sharps bin. I stand up
and shake the cramp out of my legs. ‘I think there must be some strong gear
going round.’
He leans
back against the brick wall and makes a face.
‘What do
you mean, gear?’ he says. ‘We were surprised, yeah? This guy comes over. He jabs
me and my mate in the leg. Next thing, you’re
fucking having a go.’
‘You
don’t have to worry about a story, mate. Honestly – we don’t care. It makes no
difference to us.’
‘I’m
telling you. This guy – I’ve never seen him round here. He followed us. Next
thing you know – zup! Me and my mate. Both of us. In the leg. Right there.’
‘Listen.
The Narcan’ll wear off pretty quick. I think you should come to hospital to be
monitored. Just to be safe.’
‘Nah,
mate. Fuck that. Hospital? Nah.’
He tries
to stand up, and I have to grab his collar to stop him falling backwards into
the bushes.
‘You’re
not in any state to do much else, mate.’
He’s
leaning away from me and I’m holding on to him.
There’s
a pause, and suddenly I’m looking over my shoulder before I really know why.
It’s the
dog.
The dog has
stopped barking.
I’m
holding on to the man’s collar, he’s leaning away from me, and the dog is
there, suddenly quiet, scrutinising me from the railings.
4 comments:
Stabbed in the leg?I didn't realise you had a walk on part in French Connection 2 Spence.
Walk on part? Why d'you think they call me Popeye Kennedy?
Because you eat lots of Spinach?
Wife called Olive?
Control is really called Bluto?
I yam what I yam
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