I’m beginning to wonder if we should’ve
brought more kit. But I don’t know what’s worse – going back for more, or taking
too much and being burdened down on the return. One thing’s for certain,
though: if the patient can’t walk, we’re going to need specialist help to fetch
him off this hill.
‘Not far now,’ says the man who found him,
his dog leaping on ahead of us.
‘You said that a minute ago.’
Five
hundred yards was what he said when he waved us
over in the little car park. Five hundred yards. And he pointed straight up.
But this? This feels more like a mile.
His little Collie-cross runs back to see
what’s keeping us. He’s so bright and enthusiastic, I wouldn’t be surprised if he
put a paw to his mouth and whistled.
‘On you go, boy,’ says the man. ‘Micky’s
pretty sharp. That poor fellow would’ve
been there all night if he hadn’t sniffed him out.’
The man is wearing a donkey-jacket with
fluorescent orange flashing across the shoulders. Even though he’s in his late
fifties, he’s as lean and fit as his dog.
‘Sorry it’s a bit of a hike,’ he says,
striding on. ‘It’s got to be the most remote part of the wood. He certainly
picked his spot.’
It’s heavy going. The path has suffered after
weeks of rain. The crude steps up from the car park were bad enough, but now even
though the gradient isn’t quite so vertical, these thick, exposed roots make it
feel like we’re climbing some crazy organic staircase. Sudden muddy hollows clutch
at our boots, and a tangle of over-hanging brambles grab at our clothes and kit.
We’re both puffing and blowing when the man
suddenly stops and holds his hand up.
‘Hello!’
he shouts, then listens, his breath misting as he turns his head this way
and that to catch a reply.
The wood absorbs everything with an earthy kind
of hush which the failing light only seems to thicken.
Nothing.
‘I hope it’s not a hoax,’ the man says,
turning to us and sniffing. ‘But I’d be surprised if it was. He certainly looked
like he was in pain.’
I have a thought and turn to Rae.
‘Did we lock the ambulance?’
She nods, and takes advantage of the
respite to put her bag down and properly catch her breath.
‘So – did he say what he was doing up the
tree?’
The man shrugs.
‘Messing about, I expect. There’s a lot of
that goes on. Especially at night.’
‘How far do you reckon he fell?’
‘I don’t know. Fifteen feet? His leg looks
pretty mashed.’
We pick up our bags and start forward
again. The path gets tougher, rougher. We pass the ruins of foetid dens, desperate
little hideouts, a collapsed walkway made of scavenged timber, wire and tarpaulin.
A scrap of blue and white plastic hanging from a branch – Police line / Do not cross.
‘I’m afraid this is where we leave the
path,’ says the man, pushing branches aside and following Micky further into
the gloom.
‘Come on. Two hundred yards or so, tops.’
It’s the first time I’ve actually been up
here. I’ve no idea what the history of the place is. I’ve been aware of it all
these years, a great sprawling sine wave of wild land rising darkly overhead as
I race past on the road that skirts the bottom. But if it featured at all on my
internal map it was as one of those mysterious, unexplored areas. Here there be Dragons, burnt-out mopeds.
It might have been a mature wood extensively cleared years ago. Or perhaps it
was open pasture left to grow wild. Either way, I’m sure in a hundred years or
so the wood will finally reassert itself and find its equilibrium again. Even
now we pass the occasional oak and beech. But mostly it’s a chaotic sprawl of
scrub and gorse, ragged clumps of hawthorn and blackthorn, elderberry and rowan,
spindly thickets of sycamore saplings.
And sneaking over everything, up the ribbed stands of elder and the hulks
of dead branches mouldering amongst the detritus, a rich green carpet of moss.
‘Hello?’
We all listen. Micky puts a paw to his ear.
There.
A long, low wail, some distance ahead.
‘Thank God,’ says the man. ‘Well – you know
what I mean.’
Jeremy is lying where he fell. His femur is
almost certainly smashed, and he’s been there some time. I want to ask him what
he was doing, but it’s hardly necessary. Above him, a white nylon washing line has
been thrown over a branch, a noose drunkenly fashioned at one end.
‘What’s wrong with my leg?’ he wails.
‘Christ! It hurts so much. Can you help me, please? I need something for the
pain. I’m going to die.’
‘Do you need me anymore?’ says the man.
‘Only I was supposed to be back an hour ago.’
‘He’s a big lad,’ says Rae, standing up and
freeing the radio from her belt. ‘We’re going to need the Fire Brigade. I’ll get
them running, then go back to the truck and rendezvous with them there. Will
you be okay here, Spence? You’ve got my number.’
‘Fine.’
‘We’d better get a move on. The light’s going
fast.’
‘See you later.’
I turn to help Jeremy. I give him pain
relief, wrap him in a thermal blanket, take some obs. The light around us slides
down a notch, and the trees huddle up.
‘Who are you?’ says Jeremy, a little more
settled now, peering up at me as I check him over again. ‘Why don’t you get me
some help?’
‘There’s a rescue team on its way, Jeremy,
but this is a very difficult place to get to and it might take them a while.’
‘How long?’
‘Half an hour, I should think.’
‘Half an hour!’
‘I’m just being straight with you. But
you’ve chosen a pretty remote place.’
It’s almost too dark to write. I use my
little torch for a bit, but it seems the batteries are wearing out, so I switch
it off again to conserve what little power I have left.
I wonder how Rae will find her way back.
‘So what were you doing up the tree,
Jeremy?’
‘What tree?’
‘This tree. Here. The one you fell out of.’
He closes his eyes and rests his head back.
After a while he says: ‘I wanted to get a
better view.’
‘Jeremy? Listen, mate – I know it’s a
difficult question but I have to ask. Did you tie that rope up there? Were you
trying to hang yourself?’
‘Hang myself? Why?’
‘I just need to know.’
‘Why would I hang myself? My life is –
beautiful.’
‘Good. Good.’
He narrows his eyes.
Who
are you? he says.
I ring Rae for an update. She tells me the
fire brigade are about ten minutes away now. She’ll call me when they’re all heading
up the hill.
‘How on earth will you find us?’
‘I left a trail.’
‘What do you mean? Biscuit crumbs?’
‘Nah – the birds would’ve eaten them. Every
so often I made an arrow out of sticks.’
The light has almost completely gone now, leaving
just a residue of shapes and sounds, a soupy kind of blue-black where things
lose their substance and you can almost see the weave of the air. Jeremy moans
softly. His silver thermal blanket rustles as I tuck it more firmly around him
– and then, the unmistakable snapping of a twig a little way off on the very
margins of what I can make out.
I stand up and strain to see who’s there.
‘Hello?’
There’s a long pause, and then a low voice
answers: ‘Hello yourself.’
I keep silent and try to see who it is
creeping around like this, but the light’s so bad I’d probably do better closing
my eyes and sniffing the air. I wait, but the figure doesn’t say anything else.
There are a couple more twig snaps, lighter and more distant, until we’re alone
again and the visitor has gone.
I crouch back down next to Jeremy.
‘Why aren’t you doing anything?’ he
whispers. ‘Why aren’t you getting me help?’
‘I am, Jeremy. There’s a rescue team on
their way. Shouldn’t be long.’
Suddenly he reaches out and claws at my
leg.
‘Give me your phone!’
‘No. Why? Who do you want to call?’
‘The doctor. I want the doctor to come and
fix my leg.’
I guide his hand back into the blanket and
tuck him up again.
‘Hang in there, Jeremy. Not long now.
You’re doing well.’
I hear a faint whistle. Standing up again I
can just make out the infinitesimal twinkling of flashlights away in the
distance.
‘Over here!’
I point my own torch
in that direction and switch its feeble yellow light on and off. The
flashlights cast around for a moment, then convene in this direction. They grow
larger, sounds of heavy footsteps stumbling through. And after a few minutes our
little tableau is fully fixed in the light – me, standing with a hand to shield
my eyes; Jeremy, huddled in his thermal blanket next to me on the ground, and
above us, trailing down from the black canopy of the tree, a white nylon
washing line with a noose at the end.
12 comments:
Do you think he actually was trying to kill himself? I hope the poor guy was ok. How are you, Spence? Long time no speak!
Hi PH
I have to say I think he was. I think he fell out of the tree when he tried to fix the rope more securely. Hopefully this episode will mark the point at which things start to turn around for him. A desperate situation though - but one that has a certain amount of luck going for him. If it hadn't been for Micky the dog, he'd prob still be lying there. (Although I don't know - maybe that creepy figure on the periphery would've helped...) :/
Great to hear from you, PH. And yep - I have to say - things are pretty good with me, thanks. Hope all's good with you, too.
A proper adventure! When you get bored with urban miseries you can switch to rural rescues.
That was creepy. How old was he?
tpals - Yep, it was an adventure. Mind you, the whole thing was maybe a little too reminiscent of the Blair Witch Project for my liking... I quite like the idea of being on some kind of rural rescue team. I've already got the beard, so I'm half way there. I think I'd have to get a little fitter, though.
Sabine - He was only a young guy. You have to wonder quite what had happened in his life to bring him to the woods like that. I hope he gets the help he needs.
Thanks for the comments. :)
You should get yourself one fancy LED torch, or a large number of almost-free cheap ones.
A bag of ten LED keyring flashlights is (checks) under five quid delivered on eBay UK; they weigh nothing and remain usefully bright for a long time. A pocket full of them not only gives you a light for emergencies, but allows you to hand more lights out to others whenever necessary. Such extravagant generosity should be supportable even on an NHS salary. :-)
Hi Spence.
This story reminds me of the time we hauled a deer hunter out of the woods in November. In Michigan, deer hunting season is Nov 15-30. A hunter fell out of his tree stand in the middle of the woods, and he was able to call for help with his mobile phone. It took 45 minutes to find him, using firefighters and their phone signals to triangulate his position. It was about a 3/4 mile hike out of the woods and through a knee deep stream with him on a backboard.... Isn't the wild fun ?
Leasa
Daniel - It's quite ironic, actually. I always carry a little torch (esp. in winter), and smugly produce it to light up a house number or read the numbers on a key safe &c - but the one time I really need it, the batteries start to go! I like the idea of a keyring LED though. I think I might get me one of those... ;)
Leasa - I did wonder about the whole mobile phone thing, and how accurate it is getting a fix on the signal. In our case the pt didn't have a phone (it was only the dog finding him that saved his life), but otherwise maybe that would've helped. A long carry back to the truck - but at least we didn't have to wade through a stream!
Makes an interesting change from the usual 'falls out of bed' or 'intox fall down stairs' though.
That's a short deer hunting season! I suppose that's two weeks of pretty much wall to wall GSWs, then...
Could have saved that one for the end of October Spence.
As long as Rae remembered to turn left at the gingerbread house.
You're right, Jacks, that would've made a good Halloween yarn.
I wonder how Hansel would've ASHICED the witch...
Thank you, Control. We have a four hundred, that's four zero zero year old woman, fallen head first into a cauldron. Obs as follows.... :0)
Just occurred to me that you should obviously have a HEAD-lamp, to save wear and tear on teeth if you have to work with both hands while illuminating something.
There are a billion fancy headlamps out there for cavers and night-forest-hiking nutters, but this is a good cheap one:
http://dx.com/p/1-1-1w-white-led-red-3-mode-led-headlamp-3-aaa-12924
The US-dollar price includes delivery to anywhere.
I use mine all the time for working on small devices, behind computers, crawling around in pursuit of our one indoor cat who loves to escape and hide under the house miaowing pitifully, etc. Three AAA batteries last a long time and, again, in a pinch you can give the darn thing completely away to a helper without worrying about the expense.
I have actually got a head torch, Daniel. I use it to read in the sleeping bag when we go camping. You're right - it'd be perfect in those situations. If I remember I'll slip it in my bag before the next shift...
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