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"Ambulance 51"


Chapter 1
Ambulance 51

By eliz100

Joe Vrabel and Mitchell O'Brien walked into Firehouse 50 to start their shift on ambulance 51. They met at the door and entered the firehouse together at their usual time, 6:45 AM. As they were stowing their gear, the intercom squawked, "Ambo 51 and Squad 81, man down at 53 Holly Street."

With great speed, Joe and Mitch headed towards their ambulance. Joe drove, and Mitch rode shotgun. Joe stated the address, 53 Holly St., and a map appeared on their screen. This guided them to the address and avoided traffic tie-ups. They call the voice, Rosie.

As they arrived at the address, a woman frantically yelled and pointed to the house. Joe grabbed the emergency bag, and Mitch grabbed the chair stretcher. They entered the house and saw a large man on the floor looking an unhealthy shade of grey. They immediately jumped into action.
Checking the ABCs (Airway, Breathing, Cardiac)


Breathing is rapid and shallow, and the heart rate is irregular and weak. Blood pressure 100/50. Joe put on the chest patches, and Mitch hooked up the EKG ( electrocardiogram) The screen showed anything but normal sinus rhythm. (NSR)

Mitch looked at the woman and asked, "What's his name?"

"Bobby, Bobby Harrington"

While doing a sternal rub, Joe asked, "Bobby, can you hear me? He was unresponsive to pain.

Joe had radioed Squad to bring in a backboard. As soon as it was there, Joe stabilized Bobby's head, and Mitch and the men from the Squad rolled toward Mitch and placed the backboard under the patient. Lifting the backboard, they exited the house and slid Bobby Harington into the ambulance.

Mitch yelled, "Go, Joe, lights and sirens!"

Then he rechecked Bobby's Vital Signs. They were about the same as earlier. He put a tourniquet around Bobby's arm and looked for a vessel to start the intravenous drip of Normal Saline. He found a vein that was possible. After gloving, he cleaned the spot with an alcohol pad, pierced the skin, and pushed the needle until he felt the needle pop into the vein.

By then, Joe backed them into the ambulance bay of Good Shepherd Hospital. The ER staff was waiting as Joe and Mitch unloaded their patient.

Mitch started yelling.

"Fifty-two-year-old years old white male
R/O heart attack
Breathing rate 24 rapid and shallow
Heart irregular and tachy, impossible to count

The ER staff were moving closer to the patient for their assessment. The charge nurse yelled, put him in C-2. Joe and Mitch steered the stretcher into C-2 and assisted the ER staff in transferring the patient to their stretcher. Joe headed to the supply room to get new sheets. Mitch headed to the intake desk to finish the paperwork.

As they were loading the stretcher into the ambulance.

A call came over the radio. Ambo 51, are you available?"

Mitch responded, "What you got, Cap?"

Unresponsive baby at 54 Main St., apartment 201.

"Great, we are on the road." Mitch flipped the switch for the siren and lights.

"Partner, you know these infant calls are hard on me since I lost Ellie and baby Patrick two years ago. I'm still hurting. Is it okay if I take the baby and you take the mama?"

"Fine with me."

Joe pulled the ambulance up to the curb. The mother stood with her wrapped baby in her arms and rocked from one foot to another. Mitch introduced himself and took the baby from her. He checked breathing and heart rate. There was none, so he started infant CPR and rushed toward the ambo, climbing in as he continued doing infant CPR. Joe helped the mother into the cab of the rig. Mitch knew there was no hope for this baby, but the procedure required the EMTS to do CPR until they made it to the hospital. Mich was happy to give the infant to the pediatric nurse. She asked the unit secretary to page the chaplain on call to come to the ER - STAT.

Joe and Mitch jumped into the cab of the ambo. "Joe, I need a break. How about lunch at Mama Mia's?"

"Fine with me. Call it in".

Mitch called central. "We are taking a meal break. Ambo 51 is out of service for one hour. Their break used to be thirty minutes. They negotiated a one-hour break with their union and the fire department. The EMTS agreed to work a half hour longer. So the day shift schedule is from 7 AM to 4 PM.

Many of the hospital staff and first responders eat at Mama Mia's. The service is fast, and if you get a call, they wrap your food to go. At the counter, they ordered their usual a slice with everything except anchovies for Mitch and a slice with veggies for Joe. They filled their cups at the drink counter and slid into a booth. Mama Mia herself brought out their slices.

"Joseph and Mitchell, how you doin.' So nice to see you."

Mama Mia was a sixty-ish woman of Italian descent. She was five feet tall and round in the middle, like the Pillsbury Dough Boy. Her heart was full of love, and she shared it with everyone who entered the restaurant. Since her husband died last year, she has worn a black dress with an apron.

"Mitchell, you do not look too good. Why?"

"We just came off an unresponsive baby call. It brings up my pain of losing Ellie and baby Patrick. It has been two years, but the pain of that day cuts my heart and soul, leaving a tattered mess on the cutting room floor.

"Well, tomorrow is your day off. Are you playing golf with Father Jim?"Yes?"

"I don't know if you could call it playing golf. I try to teach him to play golf, and he attempts to counsel me. None works until we get to the nineteenth hole and grab a few beers."

Mama fished in her pocket and came out with what looked like coins but were saints' medals. She picked out one and put it in Mitchell's chest pocket.


"That is Our Lady of Perpetual Help. Jesus' mother, Mary, will protect you. She put her hand on Mitchell's shoulder and said, "Until the next time.....



Author Notes I aim to write a novel this month with a little over a thousand words per chapter and 30 to 33 chapters. It took me a minute to get started now I'm rolling along.


Chapter 3
Ambulance 51 Chapter 3

By eliz100

End of chapter 2 - Father Jim suggested psychiatry and creating new memories with Thing 2.

Chapter 3

Firehouse 50 is a two-story building. The first floor has an open bay for fire trucks, squad truck, and ambulance. The ambulance and squad always backed in so the vehicles were ready for an emergency call.

Thursday morning started slow. They could sit down to eat the breakfast Bean had cooked, finishing it before the first alarm.

Bean was short for Bean Pole. He was slim and about six feet tall. He was a member of Squad 81 and gained a reputation in the firehouse as a contortionist. He could have been called Flex for flexible. He was known to get in spaces no other firefighter could go. It appeared that some of his joints were held together by puppet string. He had a mop of sandy-colored hair. Bicycling was his way of keeping in shape. Living five miles from the firehouse, was an easy ride for him.

The other members of the Squad are Lieutenant O'Malley, Frik, and Frak.
Frik was officially known as William Baily. Bob Freeman was Frak. Both men of similar build came to Firehouse 50 on the same day. It took months to keep them straight. Lieutenant O'Malley was so frustrated keeping them straight he dubbed them Frik and Frak. Whenever he called Frik or Frak, one of them would show up.

Everyone had work to do on the day shift at Firehouse 50, unless they were on an emergency call. Joe and Mitch were washing their rig. The plan was to go to the Fire Department's gas station and top off the tank.

Intercom squawking, "Fire trucks 61 and 71, Squad 81 and Ambulance 51, building collapse 255 Industrial Rd."

The mops and buckets were pushed aside. The firehouse had doors on each side for ease of deployment. The ambulance and Squad came out of the right side, and the two firetrucks came out of the left side.

"OK, Rosie. Show us the way," Joe said as he watched the screen light up.
Mitch hit the big red light and siren switch.

"That must be that big textile manufacturing plant near the river. It was in line of a tornado.

Our captain, Captain Broderick, was first on site.

"Ambo 51 set up for triage," Joe and Mitch said, pointing thirty yards from the building. After moving the ambulance, they pulled out the stretcher, extended the IV pole, hanging a plastic-covered sign, TRIAGE, on both sides.

Mitch said, "It will be a while before we see any patients. How did the golf game with Father Jim go yesterday?"

"Golf game, Mitch laughed, "I don't think you can call it a golf game. We drove all over the golf course to find The Father's golf balls. At least three were in the drink, and there were only two water features."

"We had a couple of beers at the 19th hole and talked for a long timeĆ¢?"I should have said I spoke for a long time. He is a skilled listener, and he planted a few pearls of wisdom in the end. What I gleaned from his counsel was what he said each time. He thinks I should see a shrink for evaluation and possibly medication counseling at the VA. "I am your spiritual counselor, but I am not qualified to do the rest." My response is always the same: "No way, No How. I do not want to risk the higher-ups in the Fire Department finding out. Then I would ride a desk for the rest of my career."

He said something that resonated with me. He thinks that Thing 2, and I need to make new memories.


Suddenly, patients were coming our way. In a mass casualty situation, medical staff assign patients a color based on their level of injury.


RED - Immediate need, high potential for survival

YELLOW - serious injury but immediate

GREEN - minor injuries, walking wounded

Black - deceased, dying from massive injuries

There were blankets for yellow, green, and black patients on the ground and stretchers with red blankets. They set up a triage tent for RED cases. When the Chief Surgeon arrived, he pointed to Joe and Mitch, "pre and post-op." Dr. Christini knew they were army medics and trusted their judgment in mass casualty situations.

By then, Dr. Schofield, the Director of Emergency Services, had arrived to take over triage.

Mitch and Joe headed to the operating tent. Rushing into pre-op, where there were two stretchers with two seriously injured people waiting for surgery. The nurses had assessed them.

R. Christini yelled, "Let's go, let's go!"

As the nurses unlocked the stretchers and pushed them into the operating room. Mitch and Joe took the next two patients. They each started a large bore IV needle size 16 in case they needed to get blood products.

"Let's go, let's go!"

Stretchers rolled. Out of the OR into post-op. After the medical team determined the patients were stable, they placed them in the waiting ambulance and transported them to the hospital.

All the medical staff received training in mass casualties. This group will soon have a review session to see where to improve the process.

Mitch and Joe were running on fumes after an 18-hour shift. The good news was they would have 24 hours off.

While walking to their cars, Mitch said, "That will be quite a session, as the co-chairs, Dr. Christini and Dr. Schofield, hate each other."











Author Notes I had a problem. As I was getting ready to post Chapter 2 moving it from google.doc to fanstory. It disappeared. My husband and I both tried to find but it was gone. I am sure you can realize what a disappointment that was. I thought about quitting the contest. I was on a bit of a roll but could not face Chapter 2 again. I have finished Chapter 3. I will be redoing two and working on 4. This chapter is a little over 900 words. What I learned is that I can write 1,000 words a day and I am going to keep doing it this month.


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