There’s a woman standing by the side of the
road with a phone to her ear; she waves as we approach, then hurries back
inside. The street is quiet and dark. A fox glides out of a garden ahead of us,
hesitates in an isolated pool of light thrown down by a streetlamp, then
hurries on into the darkness on the other side.
I grab an obs bag and maternity pack; Rae
fetches the Entonox.
Stacy’s house is up on a shallow rise, all
its lights blazing. It’s not immediately clear where the front door is, but the
sounds of a woman crying out in pain leads me round the back.
Stacy is on all-fours in the living room,
surrounded by a hasty scattering of towels. Her sister Kate has hung up the
phone and is down on the floor supporting her; Stacy’s husband Richard hangs
back near the kitchen, one hand flat on the top of his head like he’s trying to
stop it blowing away. He looks at me as I come in with my bags, desperate for
me to help.
As I say hello and ask a few questions, I’m
unzipping the maternity case, unpacking the kit, setting it on a nearby sofa, pulling
on my gloves and then crouching down to see how far advanced she is. What I
find is nothing I’ve ever seen before, something like a pale, prolapsed
balloon, tight with fluid, extending out of Stacy’s vagina. There’s no sign of
the baby’s head, but Stacy’s contractions are powerful and quick and there’s no
doubt she’s ready to deliver. Richard tells me they were up at the hospital
earlier that day. He said she’d had a scan, but apart from showing that the
baby was back-to-back, everything else was fine. Today is her due date. Stacy’s
had two other children, neither with any complications. Her health is good.
This balloon-like structure must be the
amniotic sac. But is there any chance the placenta could’ve been dragged out of
position to block the cervix? In a couple of hours? I don’t think it’s likely, but
I’m no expert. And anyway, even if it is the amniotic sac, could it obstruct
the birth? Is the foetus in distress right now, struggling to be born, the cord
compressed?
It’s only been a minute or two since we
came in the door but it feels longer. I’m horribly aware that all the time I’m hesitating
the baby might be struggling.
I decide to rip the sac. It tears without
much effort. There’s a rush of clear liquid over my gloves and up my arms.
Almost immediately I can see the dark hair of the baby’s head as it emerges. I
get Stacy to pant as the head crowns and is born. The baby’s face is puce, all
bunched up in that way newborns have. I check round its neck, which feels clear
of the cord.
Rae is next to me with a clean, white
towel. She’s ready to help me catch the baby.
‘Okay, Stacy. One more push and we’re out,’ I tell her. ‘Whenever
you’re ready. One last push.’
She bears down. The baby emerges, shoulders,
body, legs, flopping out into our blue gloved hands in a splattering of bloody
discharge, mucus and amniotic liquor.
‘It’s a boy!’
I hold him whilst Rae clears first his face
then his body. Almost immediately the baby opens it eyes, squashes his tiny
face up and lets out a great, squalling cry that fills the room with a sense of
relief, and release.
He pinks up quickly, beautifully.
We wrap him in another clean towel and
whilst Richard holds him, we help Stacy turn over and sit on the floor, resting
against the sofa.
‘The midwife can cut the cord,’ I tell
them. ‘There’s no rush.’
And as if I’ve summoned her by using her
name, here she is, backing in through the door with a drag-along suitcase of maternity
things, looking as smiling but exhausted as a woman who’s just landed at the
airport.
‘Is that baby I can hear?’ she says. ‘Congratulations.
What did we have? A he or a she?’
*
When
we’ve drunk the tea Stacy’s sister makes us, seen the placenta delivered safely
and everything good, the midwife happy for mum and baby to stay at home, said
our goodbyes and congratulations again, we head back down the drive to the
ambulance.
Above us the sky is brilliantly clear, a dizzying
throw of stars, stars on stars on stars, leading out into the unfathomable deeps
of space. It’s strange to think of that tiny life emerging, in that chaotic,
warm, brightly lit room, with a sky like this above it.
*
The rest of the shift passes without
incident. Half an hour before we finish and we’re back on base. The morning is
already so well established our night feels like ancient history. I’m so tired I wonder how I’ll make it home
through the rush hour traffic, but the thought of going to bed, pulling the
duvet over my head and diving into sleep is so wonderful I’d risk anything to make
it happen.
Dermot arrives for the start of his shift.
He’s been a paramedic for about a thousand years, so I tell him what happened.
‘Sounds like the amniotic sac,’ he says,
yawning. ‘There’s that expression – born in the caul. It’s quite rare. I’ve
only seen it once. They’re okay being born like that without having to tear the
sac. Nine times out of ten it’ll tear as the head comes out, but if it doesn’t,
you can wait till the baby’s born. A lot of doctors tear early, of course. They
like their interventions. But either way’s fine, I think. There are arguments
for and against. And there’s that superstition thing, of course. Your little
man won’t ever drown, so it goes. In the past the midwives used to frame the
caul and sell it as a good luck charm to sailors.’
He yawns again, then stretches as he stares
out of the window into the car park.
‘I had a different birth experience the
other day,’ he says. ‘Not quite so nice, though. Twenty weeks old.’
He holds his hand out and looks at it.
‘A perfect little thing, this big,’ he
says, drawing an imaginary outline in his palm with the forefinger of his other
hand. ‘And it was making these tiny little gasps.’ He pauses, then closes his
hand. ‘Twenty weeks – I mean, that’s got no chance. But we thought – well,
maybe they got the dates wrong. And the way things were, we couldn’t just stay
there. So we took it in, wafted a little bit of oxygen its way. Foregone
conclusion, though. They didn’t do anything in resus. I knew they wouldn’t. Just
gave mum some privacy whilst it faded away.’
12 comments:
Well, what a pleasant change from the usual, Spence. Even despite that sad ending bit. I gave birth at home at 30 weeks with the doctor's car running idle outside the door - too late to go in. All was well but grr! the smell of dettol on the carpet stayed for ages.
Hi Sabine
Yeah - it does make a change! And once the stress had passed, it was a great feeling, especially walking out into that clear & starry night - quite intoxicating!
Lovely to hear about your experience, S. I hate the smell of Dettol, too. In fact, all cleaning products (which sounds bad, but there you are).
Hope everything's good with you. :)
An extra special story to end the week on. Thanks, Spence!
No worries, tpals. Have a great weekend! :)
Nice story. I hope that after a job like that you can sleep the sleep of the righteous, happy in the knowledge that you've done a good thing that day.
Incidentally my mother was a pathologist so the smell of lysol or dettol makes me feel cozy and safe.
Beautiful post Spence x
Lovely story, Spence - must make up for some of those other terrible situations you have to deal with.
(Sad about Dermot's experience, though...)
Mother nature rarely goes wrong Spence,but well played to give her a little helping hand.
I can remember both our girls being born as though it were yesterday.tiny little sweet balls of fluff.
Now of course they cost me a fortune.
Wouldn't have it any other way.
Rob - I don't know about the sleep of the righteous, more like the sleep of the utterly wrung out! On that last drive back to base I was so tired I almost took out a traffic sign (which certainly woke Rae up). Love the detail about your mum & the comforting smell of lysol &c.
Laura - Thanks very much (for commenting & reading)!
Alexia - In some ways maybe I should've spent a bit more time on the context. That night had been particularly frustrating - a regular customer, a difficult, abusive drunk .. the usual subjects (maybe I should change the name of the blog - Siren Frustrations maybe, or Siren Checking the Situations Vacant or something). Which made the birth so much more startling, in a way.
Cheers for all your comments!
Hi Jacks
We've got two girls as well! (Did I tell you that already? 8 and 12, for the record). Two very different birth experiences. One was an emergency c-section and then 2 weeks in the baby unit, the other a mellow home birth with the only danger being the dog running off with the placenta. Both absolutely fine now, of course. I can't believe how quickly the time's gone since then...! :)
Lovely post, Spence. We lost our grandson last year at 17 and a half weeks; he was so perfect and so very very tiny. Saddest thing to happen last year but time passes and wounds heal, we hope. I am so glad to hear the baby in the caul made it safely out and pinked right up-that's a great color isn't it ?~!
So sorry to hear about your grandson, Lynda. A dreadful thing to happen. I hope you were all given the support you needed - and that every future pregnancy goes well. x
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