The Firefighters Baby

Home > Other > The Firefighters Baby > Page 8
The Firefighters Baby Page 8

by Roberts, Alison


  ‘I couldn’t believe it when you found she was in VF.’ Tim was grinning around the edges of his muffin. ‘Great job, huh?’

  Laura found Jason was still staring as he listened intently. ‘When a child has a cardiac arrest, it usually follows a respiratory arrest,’ she explained. ‘And by then the damage from no oxygen is irreversible.’

  Tim was nodding. ‘Last case like that I had, we managed to resuscitate this toddler after he’d choked on a button or something. We got him back but they had to turn the life support off two days later.’

  ‘Normally, they go straight into asystole instead of VF as well,’ Laura said. ‘So you can’t just shock them back into a normal rhythm. That’s why we got excited when we saw what we were dealing with.’

  ‘What’s VF?’ Stick queried.

  ‘Ventricular fibrillation,’ Laura explained. ‘The ventricles are the more important chambers of the heart. In a normal rhythm they’re contracting strongly and pumping the blood out to the rest of the body. Fibrillating means that there’s a very uncoordinated movement in the heart muscle and it’s ineffective for pumping.’

  ‘Whatever.’ Stick wasn’t interested in improving his anatomical knowledge.

  ‘How come you got there so fast?’ Bruce asked. ‘I thought you got sent out to some unconscious person.’

  ‘He was asleep.’ Tim grinned. ‘And rather drunk.’

  ‘That was lucky,’ Stick told them. ‘You guys were awesome at the fire from what we heard. Jase hasn’t stopped talking about it.’

  ‘It was just the first time I’ve hung around to watch.’ Jason’s ears had gone pink enough for Laura to realise he was embarrassed. ‘It was pretty impressive.’ He was avoiding Laura’s gaze and she dropped her own to her coffee-mug. Heavens, had he been impressed by her?

  ‘It was more than that,’ Bruce said. ‘You should have seen him, Laura. He was standing there, all misty-eyed, watching you drive the kid off to the hospital.’

  ‘I was not,’ Jason protested. Then he gazed down at Megan and adjusted the tilt of the bottle he was holding. ‘OK,’ he admitted. His ears were an even brighter shade of pink now. ‘It did get to me. Dunno why.’

  ‘It’s because it was a kid,’ Bruce suggested.

  ‘I’ve rescued kids before.’

  ‘It’s because you’re a dad now,’ Cliff stated. ‘It changes things.’

  ‘Nah. Why should it?’

  ‘It’s true.’ Laura nodded at Cliff. ‘I’ve seen the way friends change once they’ve had a baby. It changes your whole perspective.’

  ‘Sure does. You get a connection to other people that makes you more…human, I guess. Or less selfish or something.’

  ‘Less selfish is good.’ Jason was glaring at Bruce. ‘I hope you’re not really intending to eat that last muffin. You’ve had two already.’

  ‘What about the rest of the family?’ Cliff asked Laura. ‘Were they all OK?’

  ‘They all needed treatment for smoke inhalation and they’re keeping Vicky in for observation, but I imagine they’ll all be able to be discharged tomorrow.’

  ‘Did they say anything about what might have caused the fire?’ Bruce looked at the last muffin, looked at Jason and then sighed in defeat. ‘I didn’t get a chance to interview the mother.’

  ‘Apparently the older boy was trying to make breakfast. The toaster jammed and the curtains caught fire. His mother had taken the baby back to bed to feed him and she’d fallen asleep again. It was the neighbour who raised the alarm and woke her up.’

  ‘Where was the father?’

  ‘Who knows?’ Tim responded. ‘He walked out when the last baby was born ten months ago.’

  ‘Bastard.’

  There was a tiny silence after Jason’s expletive. Then Bruce raised an eyebrow. ‘So you wouldn’t walk out on your kid, then, Jase?’

  ‘No, I bloody wouldn’t.’

  ‘So are you going to go back to England with this Shelley, then?’ Stick sounded worried.

  ‘No. Of course not.’

  ‘Maybe she’ll want to stay here,’ Stick suggested morosely. ‘Maybe she’ll want to marry her kid’s father.’

  ‘Would you do that, Jase?’ Cliff gave his younger colleague a speculative glance.

  ‘Hey, I’m not going to marry someone I don’t love. I’m not that stupid. But I’m not going to desert my kid either.’

  Laura wasn’t the only one to sense the internal conflict but she was quite sure she was more bothered than anyone else in the room. What if Mrs McKendry’s impressions had been wrong and this Shelley was intending to come back? Whatever intentions Megan’s mother had, she had laid a very solid base by leaving the baby in Jason’s care. It had been a clever move. Jason was a very decent bloke. He was starting to care about Megan, whether he realised it or not. His daughter could prove to be a very powerful bargaining tool if this Shelley Bates was planning to manipulate him into doing more than babysitting.

  ‘Maybe you should go for custody, then,’ Bruce advised.

  Laura bit her lip. If Jason did that, he would need someone to help—full time. An even wilder thought occurred. If Jason married her, he would be safe from whatever manipulative plans Megan’s mother might have. She shook her head imperceptibly to chase the thought back to where it belonged, which was precisely nowhere. As if!

  ‘Yeah.’ Cliff was backing Bruce up. ‘She’s already proved herself to be an unfit mother by dumping the kid on a doorstep. You’d be in with a good chance of winning, mate.’

  Jason was looking positively alarmed. ‘I didn’t say I wanted to keep it,’ he said hurriedly. ‘Her,’ he amended just as hastily.

  They all heard the disapproving sniff that came from the kitchen.

  ‘I’ll pay maintenance,’ Jason said defensively. ‘And send her birthday presents and stuff. If she is living overseas, she can come and visit me for holidays when she’s a bit older.’

  ‘Like in ten years’ time?’ Stick offered.

  Jason’s wide grin was relieved. ‘Works for me, mate.’

  The sniff was at much closer range this time. ‘Has that bairn finished her bottle?’

  Jason held it up. ‘Every drop, Mackie. See?’

  ‘Time you changed her nappy, then.’

  Jason caught Laura’s eye at the same instant her pager sounded. She grinned. ‘Sorry, buddy. You’re on your own this time.’

  Tempted to grab that last muffin on her way out the door, Laura was pleased when she managed to dismiss the urge. Whether it was the lack of sleep or the stress of caring for a baby that was doing it, her clothes felt slightly looser than they had four days ago. It wasn’t a huge difference but she rather liked the sensation of comfort it gave her.

  The call was a priority one response to a ‘shortness of breath’ case.

  ‘What do you reckon?’ Tim queried as they cleared the garage. ‘Asthma, pneumonia or heart failure?’

  Laura flicked the switch to start the beacons flashing. Her finger was poised over the control for the siren but the road was quiet enough for it not to be necessary yet. ‘Could be an acute myocardial infarction,’ she offered. ‘That can make you a bit short of breath.’

  ‘So can smoke inhalation.’ Tim pulled the map from the pocket between the gear shift and the dashboard. ‘We were lucky with that kid this morning, weren’t we?’

  ‘I’ll say.’ Laura smiled. A job like that always reminded her how much she loved this career. It more than made up for all the time and effort spent on less than genuine cases.

  Like the one they were dispatched to as their final call for the day. The ‘traumatic injury’ turned out to be back pain that the grossly overweight, middle-aged woman had been suffering from for ten years.

  ‘Has it got any worse suddenly today?’ Laura asked.

  ‘No. And it hasn’t got any better either.’

  ‘Who called for the ambulance?’ A thin, tired-looking man had opened the door to them and Laura was assuming he was their patient’s husband.<
br />
  ‘I did,’ the woman said belligerently. ‘What am I supposed to have done? The doctor’s bloody useless. I rang him and he said to take some pills. I’m a bloody walking pharmacy as it is. I rattle when I walk. I’m fed up to the back teeth with taking bloody pills.’

  ‘What medications are you on?’ Laura was beginning to understand why the man was so quiet and weary. She’d only been in the room for two minutes and she was more than ready to escape. Tim was having trouble getting the Velcro on the extra-large size of blood-pressure cuff to meet around her upper arm. He was also carefully avoiding Laura’s eye and she suspected he was having difficulty keeping a straight face.

  ‘Ow!’ The oversized arm was moved enough to displace the disc of Tim’s stethoscope. ‘That hurts.’

  ‘It’ll only be tight for a few seconds,’ Tim responded patiently. ‘Try and keep still.’

  Laura caught the gaze of the man. ‘Has your wife got a list of her medications anywhere?’

  ‘She’s not my wife, she’s my mother.’

  ‘Sorry.’ Maybe living with the woman had aged him rapidly. Laura was feeling older by the minute. If the squeeze of a blood-pressure cuff was enough to elicit such an agonised response, the back pain was probably no more than a mild ache. Her impression that they were wasting their time strengthened as she read the list of medications.

  ‘So you’re taking pills for your high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, airways disease, depression, weight control, constipation and pain—is that right?’

  ‘Isn’t that enough?’

  Laura stepped over an overflowing dinner plate that was being used as an ashtray. ‘When was the last time you were in hospital, Mrs Pearce?’

  ‘Two weeks ago.’

  ‘And what was that for?’

  ‘Stomach pain. Something terrible it was. I was in bloody agony.’

  ‘What did they say at the hospital?’

  ‘They gave me six enemas. Six! If they knew what they were doing it should have only taken one. They’re all useless, the whole lot of them, and I told them so.’

  ‘Did they say anything else?’

  Mrs Pearce’s son sighed heavily. ‘They told Mum to stop smoking, lose some weight and start getting some exercise.’

  ‘And I told them, if they could do what they’re supposed to be doing and fix me up then I might be able to start doing some bloody exercise. What do they expect? Some sort of miracle? I have enough trouble getting out of my chair and they seem to think I can go trotting around the block at the drop of a bloody hat.’

  Tim had finished taking basic vital signs and filling in the paperwork. ‘There’s no real need for you to go to the hospital right now, Mrs Pearce. You’ll end up waiting for hours and then being sent home, probably with exactly the same advice you were given last time. Is that what you want?’

  ‘I want to get fixed up. I’m not going to get anywhere if I just sit at home and put up with it, am I?’ She glared at Tim. ‘It’s the squeaky door that gets the bloody oil.’

  ‘Fine.’ Laura wanted to get this job over with. ‘But you’ll need to walk out to the ambulance for us, Mrs Pearce.’

  ‘I can’t move. My back’s too sore.’

  Laura caught Tim’s eye. Their patient weighed at least a hundred and forty kilograms. They would be lucky to fit Mrs Pearce onto a stretcher with both sides down, and a scoop stretcher would probably buckle under the strain.

  ‘We’ll need to get some help to move you, in that case,’ Tim said tactfully. ‘That might take a while.’

  ‘Are you saying I’m fat?’

  Yes! Laura wanted to shout. You are grossly overweight and we’re not going to wreck our backs when you’re probably perfectly capable of walking. You’re wasting our time and we’re not going to be popular when we hand you over to emergency department staff who have far better things to do than spend time on someone who has no intention of taking responsibility for their own health. Instead, she smiled, albeit somewhat grimly.

  ‘You have a choice here, Mrs Pearce. You can stay home and ask your GP to make a house call, you can let us help you walk out to the ambulance or you can wait for us to get assistance to move you.’

  ‘Oh, get lost,’ Mrs Pearce snapped. ‘I’m not having a bunch of firemen tramping around my house and sniggering because you’re not capable of doing your job and carrying me. You’re just as bloody useless as anyone else, aren’t you?’

  ‘At least she signed the paperwork.’

  ‘Mmm.’ Laura was negotiating the rush-hour traffic through the central city. ‘Thank goodness we didn’t have to transport her.’

  ‘She’ll probably call another ambulance in the middle of the night.’

  ‘Won’t be our problem.’ Laura grinned. ‘If she keeps it up she’ll go on the blacklist.’

  ‘Doesn’t mean we don’t have to respond, though.’

  ‘No.’ Even people who abused the emergency services to the point that everyone knew them to be time-wasters had to be seen. They couldn’t afford to let a genuine incident go unattended. Laura let her breath out in a long sigh. ‘It’s been quite a day, hasn’t it? I’ll be glad to get home.’

  ‘You’re going home?’ Tim sounded surprised. ‘Have you decided to let Jase fend for himself, then?’

  ‘No.’ Laura felt the heat in her cheeks. ‘I meant home to Jason’s place.’ It hadn’t even occurred to her it wasn’t ‘home’. How could it feel like that when she’d only been in residence for four days?

  ‘Don’t let him get too dependent on you, Laura.’

  ‘I won’t. This is only temporary. And there’s no way he’d manage on his own.’

  ‘Exactly. Don’t let him use you.’

  ‘I’m enjoying it,’ Laura said sincerely. ‘Megan’s gorgeous.’

  ‘What about Jason?’ Tim seemed to be choosing his words carefully.

  ‘He’s gorgeous, too,’ Laura said lightly. Then she caught Tim’s glance and laughed. ‘I was joking, Tim.’ Good grief, had somebody other than Mrs McKendry guessed her motivation?

  Happily, Tim joined her laughter and her confession was dismissed. ‘I meant, is he enjoying it? He was pretty horrified at the prospect of trying out fatherhood.’

  ‘I’m not sure about enjoying it exactly,’ Laura admitted. ‘But he’s getting used to it. He can change a nappy all by himself now and feed her.’ She thought about the laughter that had been provoked by teaching Jason how to bathe his daughter last night and smiled. ‘Actually, I suspect he is starting to enjoy it—he just doesn’t want to.’

  ‘Why not?’

  ‘It’s a complication in his life that he wasn’t expecting.’

  ‘Has he said anything about the mother?’

  ‘She was a one-night stand.’ Laura pulled away as the traffic light changed to green. ‘He had trouble remembering her name. What is there to say?’

  ‘I’ll bet his girlfriend has had plenty to say about it all.’

  ‘Maxine?’ Laura tried to sound offhand. ‘She’s rung a few times but I’m not sure if Jase has told her why he’s so busy.’

  ‘He’s not the only one who’s too busy. You’ll wear yourself out, Laura, if this goes on much longer.’

  ‘The next couple of days will be easier, with Mrs Mack helping.’

  ‘You’ve still got to take her home after work. It must be like having two full-time jobs.’

  It was. Both Laura and Jason were tired at the end of the day shift. It would have been wonderful to sit down and have a beer or two and chill out. Jason was keen to talk about the job they had shared that morning and recapture the thrill of rescuing little Vicky. But little Megan needed feeding and changing and bathing.

  Laura did the nappy change by herself. She gave Jason a dirty look when he returned. ‘You arranged the timing of that phone call to perfection, didn’t you?’

  ‘Not my fault.’ Jason smiled winningly. ‘Tell you what, I’ll do the next two nappy changes.’ He tried an effective head tilt and beseec
hing eyebrow lift. ‘Three nappy changes?”

  Laura tried not to laugh. ‘What do you want, Jase?’

  ‘Well, now you mention it, I kind of told Maxine I might be able to meet her for a quick drink later this evening.’

  ‘But we’ve got an appointment to take Megan to the GP and have her ears checked.’

  ‘Oh, no! I completely forgot about that.’ Jason chewed the inside of his cheek. ‘Does she really need to go? She’s obviously better, so she doesn’t need antibiotics.’

  Laura just looked at him. Maybe Megan wasn’t in need of a trip to the doctor but, dammit, she wasn’t going to babysit while Jason went off to spend time with his girlfriend. She wasn’t that much of a masochist.

  ‘Oh, damn,’ Jason muttered. ‘Maxine thinks I’m trying to dump her.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘Because I keep avoiding her and saying I’m busy.’

  ‘You mean you still haven’t told her why you’re busy?’

  ‘Hell, no. Maxine hates babies. One of the first things she said to me was that I’d better make sure I didn’t get her pregnant.’

  ‘Really?’ Laura’s tone was distinctly waspish. ‘Sounds like a wonderful beginning to a meaningful relationship.’

  ‘We don’t have a meaningful relationship. We have…’

  ‘Sex?’ The word was bitten out and Jason gave her a strange look. Laura tried to lighten up. ‘For heaven’s sake, Jase. If it’s that important to you, I’ll take Megan to the doctor by myself. You go out and have sex with Maxine.’

  She received an even stranger look. ‘We were only planning on a drink, actually.’ He turned away. ‘Forget it. I’ll ring her back and say I can’t make it. We’ll both take Megan to the doctor.’

  ‘Maybe you should take her and I’ll go out with my boyfriend.’

  Jason turned back with an astonished expression. ‘But you haven’t got a boyfriend.’

  The easy assumption was galling. ‘What makes you so damned sure about that, Jason Halliday?’

  He had the grace to look ashamed of himself. ‘It’s just—I mean…Have you got a boyfriend?’

  ‘No, actually. Not at the moment.’

 

‹ Prev