The van is easy to
spot. Stopped at the junction with three guys standing round the driver’s door,
one of them on the phone, one of them waving. I can see from here it’s not
actually a cardiac arrest, but the young guy certainly looks unwell, slumped
forwards over the steering wheel.
‘At least his
handbrake’s on,’ says one of the bystanders. ‘He doesn’t look all that clever, though.’
The door is
locked, but luckily the window is half-way down so I can reach in and give him
a shake.
‘Hello!’ I
shout. ‘It’s the ambulance! How’re you doing?’
He throws himself
back into the seat, pressing his hands to his sweating face, then reaching out
in a panic to grab the steering wheel and turn the ignition, which grinds in
protest.
‘Sorry. Sorry,’
he says. He’s flushed and sweating, and his movements uncoordinated.
‘Can you open
the door for me?’
‘Yep. Yep.
Absolutely.’ He tries turning the engine over again, and goes to take the
handbrake off.
I reach through
the window, unlock the door, open it, turn the engine off and pull the keys.
‘Are you all
right?’ I say to him. ‘What’s going on?’
‘No. Yep. Sorry,’
he says. ‘I’m fine. I’m just a bit tired.’
‘Would you mind
coming on board the ambulance so we can have a chat and check you over? You don’t
look all that well.’
‘I’m fine.
Honestly. Just tired...’
And like a robot
that’s been pulled at the plug, his chin suddenly sinks forward onto his chest,
and he falls instantly asleep.
I shake him by
the shoulder.
‘Hell-ooo!’
It takes a firm
pinch to rouse him – and suddenly he’s back, kicking his legs, paddling forwards
with his hands and turning his head rapidly from side to side.
‘Hey! Easy! Come
on, now – let’s get you onto the ambulance and make sure everything’s okay.’
‘It’s fine. I’m
fine. I just need to go home and sleep it off.’
‘Come on.’
We help him out.
He’s bare-foot, soaked in sweat. He follows us onto the ambulance, and no
sooner has he sat down than he falls asleep again.
We take advantage
of his quiescent state to run a set of obs and an ECG, although you could see
the effects of the drugs he’s taken from across the road.
‘What have you
taken today?’ I ask him when he picks up again.
‘Nothing. I
haven’t had nothing.’
‘You can tell
us. We don’t care. Except we need to know for your treatment. You’ve obviously
taken something.’
‘I haven’t. I’m
just tired. Can’t I just go? You’re not gonna stop me, are you?’
Rae’s already
called for police. They arrive a moment later – two traffic cops, one straight
out of university, the other straight out of prison, by the look of him.
‘Oh dear oh
dear,’ says the old cop, the ambulance dipping to the side as he steps on. ‘A
bit early for this shit, innit?’
They get him to
blow into a breathalyser, which comes out clear.
‘So far so good,’
says Old Cop. ‘Now then...’
He produces a drug
kit.
‘Wet your mouth,’
says Old Cop. ‘Get it nice and moist. That’s it. Now. This’ll show us if you’ve
had any cannabis or cocaine. And if you’re pregnant.’
He wipes it on
the patient’s tongue, then snaps the scraper into place.
‘Cooking time
eight minutes,’ he says. ‘Meanwhile, I’ll have a little shufty round your van
if I may. Give us the key.’
Whilst he’s
gone, the patient falls asleep again; Uni Cop makes some notes.
‘The way he’s
behaving looks like a legal high,’ I tell him. ‘This mad on-off thing. I don’t
think it’ll show on your kit.’
‘No. Just
cannabis and cocaine. I’m not even sure a blood test would do a legal high.
Depends what it was.’
‘Will he be
prosecuted? I hate to think of him being on the road like this.’
‘Well, it’s
difficult. I don’t think it’ll fly with
the CPS. He wasn’t actually driving...’
‘He was sitting
at the wheel with the engine running at a junction. Surely that’d count?’
‘You’d think.
But he was stationary with the handbrake applied. You could argue he was
parked. As I’m sure he will.’
‘Can’t you do anything then?’
‘Oh yeah. He
clearly has an impairment to drive.’
Old Cop comes
back on board.
‘A few documents
that might be of interest,’ he says, dropping them on the trolley. ‘Some
antibiotics, nothing else. Looks like he might be living in there. How are we
doing?’
He picks up the
drugs kit.
‘Yep. There we
go. Smiley faces for cocaine and cannabis.’
He shows us the
stick and the two discreet lines.
The patient
wakes up again.
‘Wha..?’
He goes through
another round of uncoordinated jerks, bending forwards, throwing himself back,
slapping his face. Then settles in the chair and rests there, panting.
‘I’m just tired,’
he says.
‘Well – mate!’
says Old Cop. ‘I get a bit fidgety when I’m knackered, but this is something
else. Look. Let’s cut the crap. We know you’ve taken drugs.’
‘I haven’t...’
‘Honestly, mate –
the time for fucking about is over. We’re all professionals here, so don’t
waste your breath.’
‘But I haven’t...’
‘Listen to me.
Okay? Let me tell you what’s going to happen. I’m going to park your van up,
and you’re going to go to the hospital with these lovely people. Because
despite what you might think, my partner here is a deeply caring individual.’
Uni Cop shifts
uncomfortably in his seat.
‘I’m also going
to contact the DVLA. They will be
pulling your licence – okay? – and it’ll be up to you to prove to them over the
course of the next year or so that you’re fit to drive. Are we clear?’
Old Cop looks at
me. ‘I hope you don’t mind,’ he says. ‘But really – it’s pointless taking him
down to custody. The state he’s in, they’re guaranteed to send him to hospital.
This way’s quicker and cuts out the middle man.’
The patient has
fallen asleep again.
Old Cop looks at
him and shakes his head.
Uni Cop closes
his notebook and gets ready to go.
‘Are you all
right on your own with him?’ says Old Cop to me. ‘He doesn’t look like he’ll be
any trouble.’ He picks up the drugs kit and puts his hat on. ‘My advice? Let
Sleeping Beauty dream on. Time to go, Starsky. The city needs us.’
The ambulance
rises a clear foot when he steps off.
4 comments:
Love it.
H
Thanks H! :)
Old Cop may have been down this road before.
By a (very) slight co-incidence,whilst going to collect eldest daughter from a birthday bash on Saturday night,I came across a car in the middle of the road.Contacted the police etc.No-one was in the car,they'd forgotten to put their handbrake on!
I can't imagine many roads Old Cop hasn't been down!
Spooky car story there, Jack - The Car-ey Celeste (pause for applause).
Plenty more where that came from...
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