Shots fired into a crowd on Westminster Street in the West End, - TopicsExpress



          

Shots fired into a crowd on Westminster Street in the West End, just past midnight. One person shot, hole in his hand and another in his thigh, near a femoral artery. The wounded leg grows as the seconds tick, blowing up to twice its normal size. Is it Okay? Its just a leg shot, Ill be okay, right? asks the diaphoretic patient, his heart rate skyrocketing and blood pressure crashing. I look him in the eye, and tell him were doing everything we can, and open the ringers to full flow while my partner sinks a 16 in his other arm. He went to the bathroom and didnt come out. When we arrived at 0122 he was Code 99. CPR started, Ivs going, one, two three defibrillations, tied to a trauma board, carried down two flights of stairs and out of a million dollar home on the East Side. Hell be okay, wont he? asks the mans wife as we rush into the night and the waiting rescue. Were doing all we can, I tell her. Call somebody and meet us at the hospital. Please dont drive. And were gone. Their car crossed the line, sideswiped another car, crossed two lanes of traffic and crashed into a utility pole; the wooden ones-the ones that dont give. The car was demolished, the three kids whose night came to a sudden end at 0314 critical. More rescues called for, the most critical of the group extracted first. Shes the driver, and she appeared intoxicated, and she is worried about her friends. Are they okay? Will they be okay? she repeats herself over and over as we restrain and immobilize her, put her on the stretcher, then put the 02 mask over her face. Her questions are muffled now, but the same. Will they be okay? Shes on the couch in her modest home in the North End, its a nice house, well kept, pictures of little girls on the mantle, schoolwork on the fridge. Her face is swollen, her arms bruised. Where is he? I ask. Gone. Hes drunk. He hit me then left. She doesnt want to go to the hospital. We bandage her up, wait for the police, offer our condolences and leave. Her boyfriend is under arrest. Its 0430 when she asks, Is he okay? The group home calls at 0600. Its a respectable place in the South Side, usually no trouble there. One of the residents didnt wake up. Hes sitting in a recliner, TV on, eyes open, syringe and spoon on a little table next to him, near the TV Guide. Is he okay? asks the group home manager. No. Hes dead. I know she was up late, I try not to wake her. I slip under the covers, put my arm around her and close my eyes. Its nearly 0800, home at last. How was your night? she asks. It was okay. Blackness.
Posted on: Wed, 30 Jul 2014 19:34:08 +0000

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