A linked metal walkway runs from
the park entrance across the grass to the temporary ice rink, a long, white marquee
cut out against the night by a sequence of halogen lamps. The whole thing has
an Arabian feel, its domes swooping and sharp. The sides of the marquee are
made of glass. You can just make out all the people inside, drinking and eating
and watching, sitting on the benches taking their skates off, or putting them
on. Outside, ropes of coloured lights trace the square of the rink in the air
above, whilst below, louder and louder the closer you get, the fuss of the skaters,
the frenetic cut and slush of their blades across the ice.
Rae knocks on the door marked First Aid. Josh, the paramedic on duty,
comes outside to talk to us.
‘A bit of a strange one,’ he
says. ‘I didn’t really want to call you but in the end I didn’t have much
choice. What we have is a twenty-five year old guy, collapse query cause, not
even on the ice. He was strapping his skates on when he went over. I thought it
was just going to be a faint, but then he was complaining of chest pain, so I
did the works. Nothing out of the ordinary. Then this chest pain started to
become a bit more generalised, mixed in with a spacey kind of attitude. So
whether it’s medical, psychiatric, drugs…? I don’t know. In the end I thought
I’d better get him off to hospital.’
‘And what’s his story? Where’s he
from?’
‘Apparently he’s a student from
miles up country, doing something post-grad and high-end. No relatives here.
Nowhere to stay. Is a bit vague about the whole trip. So – who knows? Come and
say hello. He’s called Adnan.’
But Adnan opens the door before
we have a chance to go in. He stands there smiling at us, and I wonder how much
he heard.
We introduce ourselves and ask if
he’d like to come to the ambulance so we can have more of a chat there.
‘I want my money back on the
skates,’ he says, and walks over to the kiosk before we can say anything. We
wait just behind him whilst he explains the situation to the attendant. The
attendant is confused, says there’s a no refund policy. For whatever reason,
possibly because the manager knows the situation and sees us standing in the
background, authorisation is given and Adnan gets his money back. He accepts it
without much response, and follows us out to the vehicle.
I know what Josh means. There’s a
strange disconnectedness about Adnan. He doesn’t behave in the way you’d expect
from someone who’d collapsed at an ice rink and had the ambulance called. He answers
our questions without offering anything else, with the kind of brittle, synthetically
amused air you might expect from someone who thought they had nothing to
explain. We re-do all the checks. Everything seems fine. When we ask how his
studies are going, he shrugs and smiles. He has an exam tomorrow, but he’s not
worried.
‘It’s a long way for you to get
back tonight. How were you planning to do it?’
By train, he says. But he can’t
tell us what time, or what he’ll do to get to the station.
We tell Adnan that we’re
concerned about him, for the unexplained collapse, and for his well-being
tonight. He smiles again, says he’ll be fine, and can he go now?
We finish the paperwork and show
him off the vehicle. But instead of walking in the direction of the station, he
heads back to the rink. We follow him, out of curiosity, and also to explain to
Josh what happened.
Adnan buys another ticket, and
then goes over to the kiosk to hire some skates. I can tell that the attendant
is as confused as we are. He looks over in our direction for guidance, but we
can only shrug. He takes the money from him – the money that he had only a
little while ago given him back – and holds it in his hand as he watches Adnan
go over to the benches, take off his shoes, and quietly strap on the skates.
4 comments:
Curious one that Spence.Obviously something caused the blackout.Low blood pressure maybe?Something I have and,although it's only happened twice in 20 years,you do shut down,come round and there's nothing wrong with you.
I don't think it was even that, Jack. I suspect there was a mental health aspect to this job!
I've never fainted myself, although it used to happen to my mum a lot when she was younger. Going to work by tube - she said it was so crowded she didn't even make it to the floor! Anyway, she said it was a faint. Just coincidence that each time she was standing next to some gorgeous hunk... ;)
Odd. I've done some weird things before my exams but usually stuff with too much coffee and fags and hot whiskey. Still exam pressure is not to be underestimated. To this day - and I am well past it - I am sometimes woken at night with the panicky sweat of an impending physics or maths or French or whatever exam and I have to pinch myself real hard to return to my mature and sane self (ha).
I must admit that's what I thought it was, Sabine - something brought on by study stress. Even though Adnan went back to the rink, he ended up being taken to hospital later that night. Don't know what happened then, but the staff there would've had more of a chance to get to the bottom of it (if he didn't abscond). I still have nightmares about exams, too. Usually about being unprepared / needing the loo / getting lost etc. It's always such a relief to wake up! :/
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