Her Miracle Baby. Fiona LoweЧитать онлайн книгу.
To his complete amazement she hauled out a soft neck brace from the black pack. ‘Here, put this on Tom and then we can carry him in the tarp.’
He grabbed the proffered brace. ‘Are you Mary Poppins? What else have you got in that bag?’
‘It’s the new emergency pack I picked up at the medical and nursing conference I was coming home from. Laurelton Bush Nursing Centre needed one, but I wasn’t expecting to use it so soon.’
‘You’re a nurse and you’ve got an ‘in-the-field’ emergency medical kit?’ Incredulity overtook him.
‘Yes.’
His panic dropped back a notch. ‘Thank God for that.’ He swung back to his patient. ‘Tom, I’m putting on a neck brace and we’re going to get you out of here.’
Tom groaned as Will put the brace around his neck.
He should check for fractures in the pilot’s arms and legs but he had no splints to use and the fear of the plane catching fire grew by the moment. Will just wanted him out.
Then he could examine him. Know what he was really up against.
‘Meg, we’ll have to roll him out together.’
‘I’m right here. Just tell me what you want me to do.’
The strength in her voice transferred itself to him. ‘Spread the tarp out and then come and support his neck while I lower the back of the seat.’
Meg moved in close, her small hands dextrously holding Tom’s head and neck. Her light floral scent enveloped Will, defying the horror of their situation.
He tugged on the seat lever, praying it would work. The seat back started to move and he gently lowered it so Tom was lying flat.
The pilot’s breathing became noisy.
Will fought the desire to treat him there and then. But he couldn’t risk three lives. They had to get away from the plane. ‘You control his head and neck and I’ll look after the rest. On my count, we roll.’ He positioned himself so he could control the large man’s legs.
‘One, two, three.’ He pulled hard, his ribs blazing with pain. Together they rolled Tom as carefully as possible, given the situation, onto the tarp.
Meg limped to the other side of the tarp, rolling the edges in as close to Tom as possible. ‘Will one hundred metres away be safe enough?’
‘Should do it. Give me that pack and I’ll wear it. You’ll struggle enough carrying Tom.’
She tilted her head, her cheeks pink from cold and exertion. ‘I’ve seen you flinch. Your ribs are bruised or broken. We’ll put the pack next to Tom so we can both manage.’
He wanted to argue but couldn’t. Not with logic like that. ‘One, two, three, lift.’ He grunted and lifted, moving forward slowly. With each step he sank knee deep into powder snow. Exhaustion dragged at him.
With every step, Meg grimaced with pain. He adjusted his grip on the tarp, trying to take more of the load. He pushed on, hoping Tom would still be alive when they got to the clearing Meg had picked out.
‘On my count, down.’ Meg’s arms shook with exhaustion as she lowered Tom onto the snow.
Will dropped to his knees and checked the pilot’s pulse. Weak.
‘Here.’ Meg handed him a stethoscope and an LED headlamp, while she ripped open a space blanket package with her teeth.
It was surreal. All this medical gear belonged in A and E, not in the middle of an alpine national park.
Meg covered Tom, the snow falling white against the silver blanket.
Tom’s respirations had worsened—loud, gurgly and noisy. Bubbles of blood formed in his mouth.
Will checked his air entry with the stethoscope. ‘Shallow resps, poor air entry.’
‘Pneumothorax from the joystick?’
He examined Tom’s face. ‘Possibly, but he’s got a severely fractured maxilla. The middle of his face has separated from the rest.’ He looked up at her. ‘All this bleeding and swelling isn’t helping his breathing.’
Understanding crossed her face. ‘Do you need to do a tracheostomy?’
‘Yes, we need to establish his airway if we’ve got any chance of keeping him alive.’
‘And risk paralysis if his spinal cord is damaged.’ She bit her lip. ‘I hate triage.’
‘You’re not alone there.’ They were between a rock and a hard place. The treatment to save Tom’s life could render his life changed for ever.
‘Do you have a wide-bore needle, a fourteen-gauge, in that pack?’
Meg frantically scanned the laminated sheet. ‘I can do better than that.’ She read out the instructions. ‘In large bottom pouch, tracheostomy tube.’ Her fingers, pink with cold, fumbled as she opened the pack.
‘That’s one hell of a kit.’ Will took off his coat, rolling it up under Tom’s shoulders to extend the pilot’s neck. He removed the soft brace. ‘Tom, we have to put a tube into your throat. You won’t be able to talk.’ He had no idea if Tom could hear him. He was pretty certain he was unconscious.
She handed him the scalpel and cleaned Tom’s throat with the antiseptic wipe. ‘How long since you’ve done a trachy?’
Will didn’t lie. ‘On an adult, it’s been a long time.’
‘Some things you never forget.’ She gave him an encouraging smile, her confidence in him almost palpable.
He found the cricoid cartilage. The trachea is generally two finger-breadths above the sternal notch. The words of his surgical professor pounded in his head. He made a horizontal cut through the skin, the muscle and down into the cartilage of the trachea.
Meg tried to keep the area free of blood so he could see.
He needed to find the third or fourth ring of cartilage. ‘Pass the tube.’
He pressed firmly on the tracheostomy tube, until the resistance disappeared and the tube was in situ.
‘You inflate the balloon to keep the tube in place and I’ll check his breathing.’
He lifted the space blanket and put the stethoscope on Tom’s chest. The pilot didn’t flinch at the cold. Not a good sign. ‘His air entry is better but his pulse is weak. Open facial fractures bleed like hell. He’s lost a bucket of blood.’
‘Do you want me to bag him?’
‘Yes. I’ll see if I can get an IV in. What have you got?’
‘One litre of Hartmann’s solution.’
An expletive rose to his lips. One thousand millilitres wouldn’t replace the circulating volume Tom had lost.
‘It’s better than nothing, Will.’
Meg’s voice of reason penetrated his fear and frustration. ‘You’re right—sorry.’
As she rhythmically squeezed the air bag he tried desperately to find a vein. Tom was in severe shock, his veins collapsed. Will tightened the tourniquet around Tom’s arm. His fingers desperately palpated for a raised vein. Nothing.
He moved the tourniquet three times, trying arms and legs. Still nothing. He sucked in a deep breath, forcing himself to concentrate and to ignore the dread that curled in his belly.
‘Do a venous cutdown.’ Meg’s desperate words echoed his thoughts. ‘We’ve got a scalpel.’
The natural light was almost gone. In the glow of his headlamp he saw her face streaked with blood and pain, yet there was a steely determination there. She wasn’t giving in without