Joyce is
stretched out flat on one of the benches outside the cafe. Reece, the paramedic
first on scene supports her breathing with a BVM; two waiters stand either side
of Joyce’s husband, Ken, holding him up; a bystander helps to move tables ready
for the trolley, and others shuffle around offering help with fetching and
carrying.
‘Eighty-five year
old. Sudden collapse whilst seated, making respiratory effort but not all that,
pulse tachy, BP in her boots.’
We work quickly, getting
the trolley out, grabbing a pat slide, using that to keep Joyce flat whilst we scoot
her across, then legs raised, blanket on, and quickly away onto the truck. Once
there, shears through clothes, pads, dots, obs, fluids – the whole tangled fuss
of the peri-arrest situation.
As soon as we’re
done I leave Rae and Reece in the back to go outside and see to Ken.
‘Can I be with my
wife?’ he says. ‘We’ve been together sixty years and I can’t leave her now.’
I put that to the
others. They shake their heads and I know what they mean. If Joyce arrests en
route, CPR is brutal to watch.
Back with Ken, I
put my hand on his shoulder and explain the situation.
‘Joyce is really
unwell, and you’ll find it extremely
upsetting if the paramedics have to do CPR. Why don’t you ride up front with
me? I promise we’ll let you be with Joyce as soon as we can.’
‘All right then.’
I help him with
his bags, his hat, his cane, and I give him a little boost up into the front
passenger seat.
Reece has to
leave his car on scene as he’s needed in the back. As I reverse the ambulance down
the street, I can see its blue lights revolving in the distance, playing around
the street.
* * *
Joyce arrests at
the hospital just as we’re transferring her in the resus room. A team of nurses,
doctors and consultants descend on her as I come back out to find Ken standing in
the foyer. I lead him through to the relatives room and sit him down. On the
way there, one of my colleagues offers to go and make him some tea.
‘Joyce is in with
the doctors now. They just need five minutes to do what they have to do. If
you’re okay here, Ken, I’ll go back and tell them you want to be with Joyce no
matter what. I’ll make sure they understand, and I’ll be straight back to let
you know what’s going on.’
‘I need the loo,’
he says.
‘Come on. I’ll
show you where it is.’
I take all his
stuff, because the relative’s room isn’t lockable.
He puts his arm
through mine and I take him round to the nearest toilet. Whilst I wait outside,
a cleaner comes by and laughs; it’s only then I realise I’m leaning on Ken’s
stick.
‘I know,’ I say.
‘Busy day.’
Ken comes out and
I lead him back to the relatives’ room. Reece is waiting for us there. He offers
to take Ken through to resus. He gives me the smallest look as we both go to
help him up, and I guess it means Joyce has died.
I say goodbye to Ken
as he’s led away, and go outside to remake the trolley and tidy up the back. One
of my other colleagues has already taken care of the trolley.
I thank her.
She smiles and
shrugs.
‘You had your
hands full,’ she says.
* * *
Three-quarters of
an hour later we’re pulling up at the far end of the pedestrian street where Reece
had left his car. He’d been given the wrong location when he arrived and had to
walk most of the street to get to Joyce. Once he was with her, there was no
time to go back and switch anything off. So for the past couple of hours, the
car has been running on KRS with the blue lights flickering round and round,
playing over the netted trees for sale, the tables covered in wrapping paper,
ribbon and cards, the piles of meat in the butchers shop, can snow sprayed on taped
windows.
It’s dark and
late, the crowds are thinning, there are moves to pack everything away.
5 comments:
:(
Odd juxtaposition there Spence.Ken showing tremendous understanding as his wife of 60 years hovers between life and death and a miserable sod grumbling about some lights flashing.
You did well not to tell him to get stuffed.
I was too exhausted to say much of anything to anyone, to be honest, J.
It did strike me - as it has done a few times in the past - how life goes on despite dreadful things happening nearby (Maybe keep that particular bon mot off the calendar, though). It's that situation where you walk out of some awful scene in a house, pulling your gloves off & breathing in the clean air, and yet suddenly find yourself saying a cheery hi to the milkman, or watching people laugh over a cat video on their phones at the bus stop. And of course, that's a good thing!
Cheers for the comments!
Wow...so sad.
Everyone knows they have to go sometime, of course. But the specifics are what get you!
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