Strange how chilly the night had become, a few hours ago the warm night air was full of heat and humidity. I closed the passenger side window as we sped toward the house where a young woman was reported to be having a seizure. John McGovern was behind the wheel, both of us working our seventeenth hour of a twenty-four.
“I’ve been here before,” he said as we stopped in front of a little one-family house on a quiet street in the city’s Mt. Pleasant section.
“Yup, this is the house,” he mumbled to himself. We walked past the trash that had been placed at the curb for pick-up. I noticed what looked like a brand new crib, taken apart, the sides and mattress leaning against a ruined couch, the fabric of the couch ripped, it’s stuffing torn out. I didn’t think the crib would be here long, somebody would snatch it.
Lt. Rondeau walked out of the house and gave me an update on the patients condition. It didn’t appear to be a seizure, he said. I entered the house, a twenty-two year old woman lay on a different couch, her aunt kneeling before her, holding her hand.
“She’s allright,” said the aunt, “sorry to bother you, I thought she wasn’t breathing.”
We did an evaluation, decided that there was no emergency and walked out of the house past the discarded crib toward the rescue. John was unusually quiet as we rode back to the station. Half way there he told me the story.
“Last week we were there, her baby died on her chest while she was sleeping,” he said in a low voice. I didn’t inturrupt, let him tell the story at his own pace. “I think that was the couch at the curb, all slashed up, and the crib must be the baby’s. We did CPR and got here to Hasbro but it was too late. I think the baby had been gone for a while.” He drove slowly toward home. “Chris ran out of the house holding the baby, doing compressions. I bagged her all the way to the hospital, there was nothing we could do,” he said. I wondered if he believed that or was coping the best he could. He’s got a couple kids of his own.
“Did you see the crib? And the couch? That was strange,” he said, shaking his head.
I agreed. He backed the rescue into the bay and headed upstairs.