There are two
police cars outside the house. As we head in with our bags, we pass an officer
talking to a man sitting on a wall. He has an ID card on a lanyard, and I
recognise him as one of the CPNs based at the hospital, but he doesn’t notice
me.
Inside the house,
the only light is from the open front door, and from a couple of flashlights in
the hands of two officers on the stairs. One of them comes back down to give us
room to go up.
It gets darker as
we climb, our own torches illuminating snatches of detail – the floral
wallpaper, the family photos, one of them knocked on a slant. The other police
officer stands at the top of the stairs on the landing like a grim usher at the
cinema; he points left with his torch.
The patient has hanged
himself from a beam in the attic. A coarse, thick rope leads straight down to
his neck, supporting him now in a strange kind of seated position, both heels
resting forward on the carpet, arms straight down by his sides. Even though I
would guess that when he kicked the chair away he was clear of the ground, gravity
and decomposition have changed the relative positions of everything.
I breathe shallowly
through my mouth, but there’s really no need to spend longer than a few seconds.
The patient is obviously dead. Our presence is a formality.
We turn and head
back down.
Outside,
everything is overwhelmingly fresh and bright. We stow our bags. Rae gets the
paperwork started.
‘My brother used
to live round here,’ she says, writing out the incident number. ‘Years ago.
When he moved in with Gianara or Gianina or whatever. She was a handful. We
thought she was probably undiagnosed ... erm ...’
‘Italian?’
‘Bi-polar. She’d
be an angel one minute, throwing plates the next. I’m amazed he stuck it as
long as he did. It’s funny how these things work out. What’s the date today?’
She starts
ticking boxes.
‘I wonder why all
the lights were out’
‘Maybe they cut
him off. Maybe that was the last straw.’
‘Do they do that
these days? Cut people off?’
I shrug.
Another police
car pulls up and one of the officers strolls out of the house to meet it.
‘Do you think we’ll
get our break now?’
Just as I say
that, we hear an all-call on the radio for two outstanding emergency calls.
Rae sighs, and smoothes
the ROLE form flat on her board.
‘You can’t rush
the paperwork, can you?’
‘No,’ I say,
leaning back against the truck, taking a deep breath, resting my eyes on the brilliantly
coloured flowers in the opposite garden, the hydrangeas and geranium, roses and
lavender. ‘No. You certainly can’t.’
6 comments:
I love paperwork Spence.
It's great giving up hours and hours of my time writing down the same thing in triplicate to keep paper pushers who never read a word of it in a job.
Quite handy when you need a break though... making sure all the boxes are ticked etc ;)
Interesting stuff, I like your take on word play.
Thanks, Chef Files!
Hmm... paperwork. I dream of having paperwork, instead of Toughbooks and ePCRs. Mind you they still take a while to complete which is fine on that job you're leaving at home where some boffin hasn't yet given you a call time limit. Less brilliant with the very ill where you scribble everything relevant on a piece of paper, a glove or the whiteboard and rush to resus.... and then get a fine as it takes more than 30 minutes after supposedly being Trolley Clear to produce adequate documentation.
Hi Anon
Toughbooks & ePCRs, eh? You sound about twenty years ahead of us! I share your pain about the Trolley Clear time & the time you are actually ready to take another call, esp. after a busy job. :/
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