Page 23 of In Sheets of Rain
“Ambulance Emergency,” I heard in the background.
“LSU 1-5, Priority One to Grey Lynn. R6.”
“Is the patient breathing?”
“Return to station, Thames 3-5-6.”
“The ambulance is on its way. Stay on the line.”
“Station Six. LSU 5-6. Priority One. LSU 5-6. Priority One to Takapuna. R4.”
“Hey, A 1-8,” a guy said, sitting off to the side, near the door.
“Hi,” I said, staring around the room, stunned.
It was a living, breathing thing. Alive in a way that being on the road sometimes wasn’t. Safe behind four walls. Watching our world through a computer screen. The faces behind the voices over the radio in our trucks. The voices of angels on the airwaves.
“Have you not been in here before?” the guy asked.
I shook my head. Comms had been a mystery.
“Huh,” he said, standing. He held out his hand to shake. “I’m Gregg.”
“Is that your Ducati out there?” Matt asked while I shook the guy’s hand. Matt was my newbie AO. I was in the hot seat. Not yet a paramedic, but close.
“Yep,” Gregg said. “My pride and joy, although the missus would argue with that.”
“Gregg was in a bad accident a while ago,” a woman said from the desk to the right of the door, practically alongside Gregg’s. “He fractured both femurs.”
I winced. Matt whistled. Gregg shook his head.
“That’s why he’s so short,” the woman dispatcher explained. “Lost a foot in height because of that, didn’t you, Gregg?”
I started laughing. Matt’s mouth hung open.
“Nice one, April,” Gregg said. “A 1-8, meet April, your North Comm dispatcher. That’s Steph, Nigel, and Karen,” he added, pointing to the rest of the Comms staff.
I smiled as I shook my dispatcher’s hand, nodding a greeting to the others. “Kylee,” I said. “This is Matt.”
“We know who you are,” April said. “Your names are in the system and up on the wall.”
“The wall?”
She nodded toward a huge whiteboard with magnetised name tags under station and truck numbers in a grid.
“Cool,” Matt said, wandering off into the room for a better look.
I stared at the board and searched for names I knew, aware there were more on the whiteboard than I’d ever met.
“The Service is big, huh?” Gregg said.
“Sure is,” I muttered.
“You’re making a name for yourself, though,” he added.
“I am?”
“Sure,” April said. “The ambo who tamed Sean.”