‘Rachel’s
dying. You come, please.’
Jake
hurries ahead of us into the block and has disappeared by the time we’ve
struggled into the lobby with all our bags. He’s a striking figure. With his long
black hair, oiled beard and dark eyes, he wouldn’t look out of place on the set
of The Three Musketeers. I half
expect to hear his sword clattering on the concrete steps above us as he leaps
them, three at a time.
A
door stands open on the fourth floor.
‘Here!
She here!’ Jake says, standing over a thirty-year-old woman collapsed on the
sofa, her head pitched back and her breaths coming slow and noisy.
I
lay her lengthways and tilt her head to open the airway. There’s a blue tinge
to her lips and nose, and when I open her eyelids, her pupils are pinpoint.
‘Tell
us what happened, Jake,’ I say to him, as I insert an airway and Rae gets some
oxygen running.
‘Rachel
was okay, okay? She smoke one
cigarette, then have more ‘nother cigarette, then cough and cough like this – argh! – like she could not get air, you
know? – then she roll back like this – urgh!
I did the chest pushings and the mouth to mouth. Was this right thing to do?’
‘She’s
got a pulse at the moment, so that’s good. The thing is, Jake, it all looks
very much as if Rachel’s been taking heroin today. Obviously we don’t care. We’re
not the police. We just need to know so we can treat her effectively. Has she
smoked or injected any heroin, do you think?’
Rae
has already drawn up some Narcan and hands it to me to inject into Rachel’s
shoulder.
Suddenly
Jake looks much less co-operative. He straightens up and glances behind him,
like he’s gauging time, or listening for the lobby door.
‘I
don’t know what this mean’ he says, his eyes super-wide in an effort of
concentration.
‘Is
Rachel a relation of yours?’
‘No.
She jes’ friend.’
‘Does
she have any medical conditions?’
‘I
don’t know these things. I don’t know anything ‘bout her.’
‘How
long have you known Rachel?’
‘Three,
four year. That’s all.’
‘So
you’ve known her three or four years and you don’t know anything about her?’
He
shrugs.
‘Not
name, not where she live, not what she do. Nothing.’
‘But
her name is Rachel?’
‘Is
Rachel, sure, I tell you. But I don’t know last name. Okay?’
‘Okay.’
Rae
has cannulated her by this time. She draws up another dose of Narcan ready to
give IV.
‘Did
she have any belongings when she came to see you?’
‘Sure.
Is bag there.’
He
points to a tatty carrier bag. Inside is a purse, empty except for a debit
card, and a bundle of lingerie. At leas the debit card gives us a name.
Rachel
is pinking up nicely. She gags on the airway so we take it out. She starts to
open her eyes, and cough repeatedly.
I
set the chair up and we make ready to go.
‘Will
you be coming with us, Jake?’
He
shakes his head.
‘Me?
No. Why fore I go? I don’t know this person. I don’t know Rachel and what she
do. I told you everything.’
He
watches as we load her onto the chair and wrap her in blankets.
‘She
not die then?’
‘No.
I think she’ll be okay.’
‘And
I did good thing?’
‘Yes.
You did fine, Jake. You called us at just the right time.’
He
steps aside as we make to leave.
‘Drugs,
eh?’ he says, softening a little. Then, hastily: ‘If that what she do.’
4 comments:
The one, strange quality that all illicit drugs have in common - they make the user think they can make other people believe in fairy tales.
I can only think that he had a fair amount of gear in his flat and was in a panic the police might show up - esp. if Rachel died. Still, it was annoying he wasn't more forthcoming. He could've made our job a lot easier!
A little help is better than no help I suppose,but there is the fear that he'll be sleeping in a cell that instantly leads to amnesia I'd suggest.
Def - An acute attack of uniformaphobia, often resulting in short term memory loss. Responds best when left well alone. Happy to oblige...
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