It’s only after
we’ve started chest compressions on the naked man, got the defib pads on,
shocked once, PEA, carried on, passing smoothly on into the more advanced
reaches of our resus protocol, that we notice just exactly what sort of room
this is.
The bed frame has
several metal loops bolted along the side with lengths of chain threaded
through; there are handcuffs attached to the metal rods of the headboard;
something leaning up against one wall like a medieval ironing-board with spikes
and shackles; a wardrobe hung with capes and straps and one-piece zippy leather
things, and a treasure chest spilling with toys, including a mini-cricket bat
with a dildo for a handle.
Kenneth, the
friend who called us, peeks round the door.
‘Is he okay?’ he
says.
‘I’m afraid
Steven’s heart’s not working at the moment but we’re doing our best. Can you
tell us what happened again?’
‘Steven said he
wasn’t feeling all that well and he needed to take some medication. I went
downstairs to .. erm ... go to the toilet and freshen up, you know. When he
didn’t come down after about twenty minutes I went back up to check and found
him unconscious on the bed. The lady on the phone said to put him on the floor.
Is he going to be all right, do you think?’
‘Like I say,
we’re doing our best. Kenneth, could you do us a favour? There’s another crew
on their way. Could you keep an eye out for them and show them straight up?’
‘Will do. Can I
get you a cup of tea or anything?’
‘That’s very kind
but we’re fine for the moment. When the other crew get here I’ll need to get
some details from you, his date of birth, address, that kind of thing.’
‘Well I don’t
know much. But I’ll do my best.’
‘Thanks,
Kenneth.’
He snatches a
brief, appalled look at his friend, then goes back downstairs.
* * *
The supporting
crew have a senior paramedic on board who takes over the resus. They fit a
Lucas to Steven – a machine that delivers chest compressions automatically.
It’s a brutally efficient thing, a big rubber plunger on a piston, pumping up
and down at exactly the right speed and depth. A curved board goes underneath Steven’s
chest, fixed right and left into the gantry of the mechanism. A harness passes over
his shoulders and behind his neck to stop the machine slipping down, and his hands
are strapped up either side of the machine, too. With the chest compressions
taken care of, it frees me up to go downstairs and get some details from
Kenneth.
His next door
neighbour, Janet is sitting with him. She saw the ambulances outside and came
round to give him support. A sturdy woman in a white towelling robe, she
clatters around in the little galley kitchen making tea.
After ten minutes
or so I go back upstairs to find that Steven now has an output. I relay what
information I’ve gleaned from Kenneth, then go out to the prep the vehicle and
bring a chair back in, roughly clearing what I can from the hallway and the
stairs as I go.
It’s an awkward
space. But between the four of us we manage to manoeuvre him out of the room, round
the corner and down the stairs. I’m aware of how strange it must be to see Steven
in our chair with what looks like a bright plastic printing press strapped to
his chest, but the effort of negotiating the steep stairs takes my mind off it
somewhat.
Kenneth and Janet
watch from the sitting room as we pass. Kenneth puts a hand out briefly to
touch Steven on the arm. ‘I’ll come up and see you later,’ he says, then pulls
his hand back and rests it on his own chest.
‘Oh, Kenneth,’ says Janet, and takes a sip of
tea.
6 comments:
You never know what goes on behind net curtains.
At least Stephen recovered.
Whether he and Kenneth will recover from the embarrassment is another matter.
The last thing you want is a whole load of paramedics clumping into your play room. Or maybe the first thing, I don't know...
Got called to a similar job where a chap had a stroke, unfortunately he was strapped to a wheel at the time. His 6ft leather clad "friend" was beside herself.
That sounds like an even more ambitious playroom. What was it - a converted mill?
The very definition of dying doing what you love, I suppose.
And then you get to see Saint Peter's eyebrows go up as he scans your paperwork, and says, "You blighters have it all worked out, don't you? If we keep you here, you're in heaven, and if we send you down there we know you'll enjoy every bleeding minute of it."
Poor old St Peter (I'm guessing he's old by now). I ought to get himself a Ledger App to speed things up a bit. Ressurrection 4.0.
I wouldn't mind betting Kenneth was curious where we got our equipment from.
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