by Henri Colt
energy drink
I’m alone in the
patient compartment of our rig, separated from my driver, who’s also a paramedic. He can only hear me through the thick glass window. The ventilator
fan is set on high, just like we were told to do after the World Health
Organization declared the coronavirus a pandemic with fatal repercussions. We’ve
been out since six this morning. I just chucked the last disposable gown in our
emergency kit, and I’ve been wearing the same N95 respirator mask for three days
now. Three 12-hour shifts, three days in a row, but I consider myself lucky.
Friends of mine just have surgical masks, which we know provide no protection.
Funny how some bosses suckered us into thinking they did some good, and besides,
they said, what else are we to do?
The 60-year-old
diabetic woman we just picked up is pasty-looking and wheezing. Her daughter
claimed it was a bad asthma attack and she was out of inhalers, but when we
called it in and said the gal’s got fever too, they told us it’s probably the
virus.
I double-check her
oxygen mask. Her breathing is getting worse, and she can’t talk. I take another
blood pressure reading—it’s low.
I can’t feel a
pulse.
“What did the
dispatcher say?” I shout to my driver.
“It’s a
forty-five-minute wait at the ER, and we’re still ten miles away!” he yells back
to me over his shoulder.
“We’re screwed,” I
mutter under my breath, knowing he can’t hear me anyway with the sudden yelp of
our siren and the screech of our tires on the road.
“I’m giving her a
breathing treatment,” I holler. He needs to know what I’m
doing.
“That’s against
regulations, remember? No nebulizers in infected patients. It might spread the
virus.”
“Well, those were
guidelines—we never got a written order. Besides, I don’t know if she’s
infected, and she sure as hell doesn’t have COVID-19 positive tattooed across
her forehead.”
“You’re gonna get us
fired.”
“Just drive,” I say.
I break open the
nebulizer bag and prop the woman up on the gurney. For a moment, I think she’s
looking at me, but then her pupils roll up under her eyelids, and her eyes go
white. “Damn, she’s coding.” I jam my fingers over her carotid and can’t feel a
beat. A lead from the electrocardiogram monitor falls off. I start chest
compressions. The rig lurches forward. I can almost feel my driver leaning on
the accelerator.
“Let her go,” he
shouts.
“I’m not giving up no
matter what the boss might say.” I tear off my fogged-up goggles. “Maybe it’s
not the virus, maybe. . .”
She perks up. She opens
her eyes. I reconnect the EKG lead and see a waveform.
She’s
alive.
We pull up to a special
entrance of the emergency department. The doors swing open. A doctor and two
nurses wearing hazmat suits start dragging the gurney out of the
rig.
“What happened?” the
doc says, not taking her eyes off my patient.
“Just an asthma
attack,” I say. “Nothing more.”
“You sure?” she says. I
can tell she sees the nebulizer. I can tell she knows. I swallow
hard.
“I’m sure.” We’ve got
another call. I’ll file the paperwork when we get back.
“Stay safe,” the doctor
says, pointing at my goggles before swinging the vehicle door shut, “and...” but
the rest of her words drown in the wail of our siren as we take off.
About the author
Henri Colt is a physician-writer and wandering scholar. His stories have
appeared in Rock and Ice Magazine, Fiction on the Web, Adelaide Literary
Magazine, Active Muse, and others.
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