A Birthday That Should’ve Been Ordinary
We’d been married forty-three years. Hockey was her joy, so for Carol’s birthday I splurged on good seats in Section 214. The arena buzzed—vendors shouting, organ music ricocheting, a river of fans flowing past our row.
Twenty minutes into the second period, Carol squeezed my arm hard.
“Dennis… I can’t breathe right.”
Her pupils widened. Her body went slack. I caught her before her head struck the concrete.
Seventeen Pair of Feet
“HELP!
Call 911! My wife needs help!” I shouted, voice cracking over the crowd. A woman in a pristine home jersey muttered “excuse me” and stepped over Carol’s legs.
Two men stared, then looked away. A teenager lifted his phone—not to call, but to film.
I lowered Carol across the seats, checked—no pulse. The muscle memory from a CPR class decades ago came roaring back.
Thirty compressions. Two breaths. Repeat.
“Please,” I begged the current of strangers sluicing past us. “Please.”
The Only Footsteps That Mattered
Boots pounded concrete. A man slid to his knees opposite me, breath steady, eyes sharp.
Leather vest. Road-worn hands.
“I’m a paramedic,” he said. “Name’s Rick.
Keep compressions. You’re doing fine.”
He pivoted, voice like a command post. “EVERYONE BACK.
GIVE US SPACE. YOU—call 911. Now.” The kid with the phone actually dialed.
Rick checked Carol’s airway, skin, pupils. “Likely cardiac. Stay with your rhythm.
Don’t stop.”
When Authority Arrives In A Vest, Not A Uniform
A security guard sprinted up. “Paramedics are two minutes out!”
“AED. Now,” Rick barked.
The guard vanished and reappeared with the defibrillator. Rick tore open the pads, planted them with practiced precision. “Clear!”
The shock rocked her body.
No pulse. He was already back on her sternum. “Come on, Carol.
Stay with your husband. Fight.”
Hands That Would Not Tire
My arms burned; my count stuttered.
“Switch on three,” Rick said. “One, two, three.” His compressions were metronome-perfect—deep, fast, unbroken.
“What meds?”
“Blood pressure,” I gasped. “Stress lately—our son deployed.”
He nodded, never breaking cadence. “Copy.”
“Why did you stop?” I asked, half to him, half to the universe.
He kept working.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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