The weather forecast had predicted this as I said goodbye to my daughter and left for work that morning; I watched it start to snow from my office window a few hours before it was even time for me to leave for home. As my friends passed my desk for the exit, I warned them all to drive safely. Most humored me and nodded. Others told me they were taking the bus or subway home, so no worries other than the overcrowding they expected.
I packed up and left thirty minutes later. I got that breakthrough I had expected around noon. I was both pleased and yet so pissed that I had taken this long on a what I thought to be simple coding. Sometimes, it just goes to show that overconfidence in one's ability, coupled with an underestimation of how clever some people are, can cause us all to have an attack of the stupids on occasions. When I came back and sat down with my coffee in hand, I finally gave the person who wrote it the respect he/she was due.
Once saved, closed down and now content, it was time to take on the snow and the cold, both expected, and yet unwelcome. With the busier routes behind me, I concentrated more on the roads that the countyâs snow plows had done little to clear. Home was still several miles away, and the roads around there were mostly empty since the smarter ones of us left work early or had not gone into work at all.
The black car behind me was going faster than I would have dared. They even flashed their lights at me to get out of the way. The ass clearly wasnât looking; the snow plows had cleared only what was deemed enough of the road to get people around. I wasnât dropping into a snow bank for his convenience, that was for sure. Finally finding a clear part of the road, the driver roared past me.
The folks in that car clearly didnât know that stretch of road, wooded on both sides, and the road itself dipped on one side into a sharp and lethal left-hand bend. None but the brave or stupid took on that stretch of road at any real speed. Add to that a good couple inches of un-cleared snow on top of the compacted stuff from earlier, and you had a nightmare in waiting.
Sadly, that nightmare happened before my very own eyes: the tail lights of the lunatic driving swayed from side to side. They hit the brakes, harder this time. That was the stupidest thing they could do, because they were then introduced to the slight dip in the road and all bets were off. I eased off the gas, slowed and watched the inevitable happen as they slid straight across the road, brake lights still on, and in a sideways skid, as the driver would be frantically trying to correct the tragic mistake he/she had initiated. To this audience of one, the driver was now in the hands of nature.
The tree, one that had been here longer than the town down in the valley below, still stood proud. Its trunk moved to the laws of physics, yet still won the duel. The carâs windshield resisted for a moment, but by those same laws of physics, it was doomed from the very beginning. The solid branch was angled upwards slightly, forcing the roof of the car to bend in the middle and shattering the windshield, before the front of the car connected with the battle scarred and very solid trunk, forcing the hood upwards at a horrible angle.
Any noise, dampened by the surrounding trees, kept its secret victory from any other people in the area. When I got beside the wreck, my first thoughts were of dealing with the engine fire as my priority, before even looking to see if anyone was alive in either the front or the back. With my trunk open and extinguisher in hand, the fire was out before it had gained any real hold on this twisted piece of metal, I then turned my attention to gaining access to the vehicle.
I used both hands on the handle of the rear door, but the condition it was in meant that much effort was a complete waste of time. My now empty extinguisher on the rear door window caused my hands to numb by the impact of the extinguisher hitting the glass. Going in through the now glassless back window, pushed out by the victorious branch that waved its victory to the breeze, this was the only option left to me, and even I wasnât prepared for the consequences of the drivers actions.
One person was alive in the back: a young girl, her still form resting against the side window, the cut along her forehead and the way her chest moved back and forth at a regular pace gave me hope that she was just knocked out. A quick check of putting my fingers in search of the pulse on the side of her neck just re-affirmed my racing thoughts and calmed my anxiety that there may be more than one serious casualty in this wreck.
The woman in the front took the brunt of the trees displeasure that was for sure. Climbing between the seats wasnât easy, at six-two and hugging close to the two-hundred-pound mark, Iâm not exactly dainty in form, and it was times like these that continued to remind me I needed to lose those pounds I had accrued since I left the army. Once I got the front passenger seat down and crawled over it, I got a good look at the woman driver, silently cursing her for being so stupid. And with a child in the back seat, as well.
While the 911 operator kept me talking I could hear the sirens coming up the road; when their lights washed across the area, bathing us all in headlights and red and blue emergency lights, I thanked the operator and closed my cell down, some sort of inbuilt instinct made me look behind me, the girl was awake and staring at me.
My words offered some comfort, I hoped. âHelp is on its way. Hang in there, honey, and weâll get you and your momma out of here in a minute.â
I held out a hand towards her and she watched it close in on her and stop within easy reach of her own. I think her instincts came into effect just then, when she reached out and held mine. She gave my hand a slight squeeze and attempted a smile.
*******
The rational part of my brain looked upon what happened next, as the fire department quickly assessing the situation and forming some sort of action that wouldnât make things worse, like trying to prevent the car exploding with us in it perhaps? Yet as I sat with one of my hands clasped tightly to the little girl, offering any form of comfort I could and the other hand placed against the neck of the unconscious woman in the front of the car feeling for her pulse, it sure felt like the calm before the storm.
A head appeared through the back window, he looked around, nodded to me and slightly turned his head and started shouting orders back out the hole that was once the back window. The little girl suddenly turned her head and both faces were inches apart. It may have been the confined space we all occupied and the sudden shock of seeing someone so close to her at the moment, but her silence remained a mystery to me. The tears of, perhaps relief, that I hadnât lied when I said help was on its way were no longer repressed, and she just burst into tears.
The guy handed me a blanket and I followed his directions as best I could, since the little girl wouldnât let go of my hand; using just the one took longer than I wanted. Within seconds, I had the driver covered in with the blanket from her head down. Iâm not sure if what happened next was amongst the orders that the quickly departing head had given, but a tube rested against the base of the window, there was a slight puff sound from the tube and the window shattered into tiny pieces.
Thatâs when I spotted a pointed piece of metal protruding from the tube by a good inch. The tube was removed from the door and replaced by a medic, who then took charge of the women in the driverâs seat. She was doing her own shouting, both at the unconscious woman and to whoever was behind her, passing through bits of medical equipment she required.
Both I and some of the other emergency crew turned our attention to getting the child out. An interesting safety knife appeared, and I used it to cut through her seat belt. I was then asked to leave, and I left the rest to the professionals.
Now detached from the events in front of me, I was in awe at the professionalism and the speed of the emergency crew. With a little coaxing, the girl climbed out by herself, one of the fire crew held out his hand and she clung tightly to it. Once free, she stood, the guy removed his hand from her grasp and lifted her clear from the car and straight to the medic waiting by the ambulance.
It was as the medic used the light from inside the vehicle to treat the young girl that my own hearing picked up on something to which my own mind quickly made a connection, and I looked a lot more closely towards the little girl who was struggling with one of the medical team. He was trying to talk to her in the calming voice Iâve heard all medical people use, and the child was trying desperately to push him away.
I walked up to the medic and placed my hand on his shoulder to get his attention.
It was important that he turned to look at me before I said. âShe canât hear you, sheâs Deaf, and my best guess is, sheâs trying to push you away so she can lip-read what youâre saying to her.â
The look of confusion came first, the young lady and I read the âoh shitâ pass his lips a second later.
âYou understand this stuff then?â
Although nodding my head in agreement with him, Iâm sure he could have worded it better if he had just taken a second to think about it.
For the next few minutes, I technically became the translator between the medic and the little girl. It took some coaxing, but I did find out her name was Clare. The medic looked on this as a huge step forward, and although he did try his best to keep looking at her, and stop slowing down his speech to me and making himself sound like an idiot, his instinct slipped once in a while, and I ended up continuing to put my fingers to good use, using ASL with the girl.