Paddington Children's Hospital Complete Collection. Kate HardyЧитать онлайн книгу.
there were some people who loved to have a good look at others’ misfortune.
It was a relief to step inside.
They didn’t turn for A&E, instead they moved swiftly through the corridors, guided by a team leader, and with relief, Victoria saw that an elevator had been held for them.
Theatre was waiting and their efficiency was amazing, so much so, that Dominic raced back down to the Accident and Emergency unit as his skills were still in heavy demand.
It was so calm in the theatre and it was just a blessing to be there.
The head-and-neck surgeon had finished scrubbing and was speaking with the anaesthetist about their approach to the neck wound.
Lewis was being given blood through both arms now and he had been given sedation before they went ahead with the intubation.
And Victoria felt dizzy.
Ignore it, Victoria told herself.
But she had been standing there for what felt like a very long time.
‘How much longer?’ she asked, because she was starting to see stars.
And whether it had anything to do with her complexion or voice, or just that they were ready now, the theatre nurse took over just in time.
‘Come on,’ Glen said.
Glen led her out of the theatre and down a corridor and Victoria bent over in the hallway with her hands on her thighs and took some deep breaths, but when that wasn’t enough she sat on the floor and pulled her knees up and put her head between them.
‘Do we have to go back to the school?’ Victoria asked.
‘No, we’ve been stood down,’ Glen informed her. ‘I’ll go and find you some water.’
‘Did they get them all out?’ Victoria asked as Glen walked off, though she did not look up.
‘I believe so,’ Glen answered.
He returned a little while later and Victoria took a long, grateful drink as Glen spoke. ‘Some have been taken to Riverside but most are here.’
She nodded and, having taken a drink, put her head back down. Victoria wasn’t so much dizzy now but replaying the rescue in her head and questioning her decision to dash forward.
It had been instinct, she knew that, but now it was starting to hit home that it wasn’t just her own life on the line.
And some time later, that was how Dominic found her.
Slumped against the wall, head between her knees, and Dominic was cross all over again with her for flouting the rules and crossing the line.
‘How’s the redheaded kid?’ Glen asked Dominic as he approached.
‘I’ve just brought him up for an urgent head CT and handed him over to Alistair, the neurosurgeon,’ Dominic said.
He stood over her and she could feel him demand that she meet his eyes.
She looked up then and the look he gave her felt hostile, even if his voice was even.
‘How bad is he?’ Glen asked.
‘GCS of six,’ Dominic answered Glen while looking at Victoria. ‘He was hiding in a cupboard.’
‘Poor kid,’ Glen said.
It was Glen who asked all the questions, Dominic noted, but he had one of his own, and though it was for the two of them he spoke directly to Victoria.
‘Do you always ignore orders? You were told to stay back because a building had the potential to collapse.’
‘I could see that the firefighter was struggling,’ Victoria explained. ‘And that the child was bleeding profusely.’
Victoria was starting to feel a bit better, but she was herself questioning the decision to run forward. She really didn’t want to deal with Dominic right now and so she pulled herself to standing and spoke to Glen. ‘Let’s get back to the vehicle.’
‘One moment...’
Victoria turned to the sound of Robyn’s voice. Robyn Kelly was Head of Surgery and very much a part of the new drive to save Paddington’s.
‘Dominic, we need you to speak to the press.’
The hospital had been stretched today but the critically injured were now all in the right place and order was restoring. Speaking to the press after incidents like this was a part of the job and so Dominic nodded.
‘And you too,’ Robyn said, looking over to Victoria.
‘Me?’
‘They want a representative from all branches of the first responders,’ Robyn explained, and then nodded her head towards a staff room. ‘Come and see this.’
The news was on and the cameras were trained on the fire that was still burning but had been brought a little more under control.
And there, in the top right hand of the screen, was an image of Dominic and Victoria bent over little Lewis and together fighting to save his life.
‘Angela Marton, a reporter, just asked the viewers to consider how much more seriously things might have played out if Paddington’s had been closed,’ Robyn said. ‘There are people talking about it all over talkback radio...’ She looked over to Victoria. ‘Finally there’s some anger being generated about the merger.’
‘Good,’ Victoria said.
‘This image is on all the channels...’
Both Dominic and Victoria did their best not to catch each other’s responses as Robyn told them that they had just become the poster picture for the campaign to save Paddington’s.
Robyn had to get on, and so it was Victoria and Dominic with Glen by their side who walked back through the hospital.
Glen was asking about all the injuries and Dominic was doing his best to reply, but of course his mind wasn’t really on the conversation.
It was also moving on from the disaster and back to a few moments before the major incident alert had been put out.
He thought of Victoria sitting in the Imaging Department waiting room, and then he thought of her sitting slumped and pale on the floor outside the theatres.
Anyone would be feeling a bit faint, Dominic told himself. Victoria had been pushing on Lewis’s neck for ages.
Then he looked over to her and he could see her staring fixedly ahead.
Once outside they walked over to the press area and Victoria spoke with her supervisor where she was given a brief.
The police would speak first, then the firefighters, followed by Dominic, and then Victoria was to speak briefly about the ambulance response.
‘The last child pulled out was Ryan Walker,’ she was informed. ‘He’s six years old.’
‘Okay,’ Victoria said, and she deliberately did not look over to Glen.
He had a son called Ryan and she knew he would get upset at the link.
She went and took her place in the line-up.
Yes, her mind was busy working out ways to get the angle she wanted included, but she was also acutely aware of the man who now stood next to her.
The cameras were on them as they stood side by side and she could feel his tension.
Though, this time, it was not of the sexual kind!
‘We need to talk,’ Victoria said as she looked straight ahead. ‘Though not here.’
‘Obviously,’ came Dominic’s rather scathing response.
She turned and looked at him, and wasn’t sure if he was annoyed that they were going to be forced together