A Paramedic Saved A Toddler From Fire And Walked Into A Deadly War-Tep

Sixteen hours into a double shift, my hands would not stop shaking.

Not because I was scared.

Not yet.

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The locker room smelled like damp nylon, stale antiseptic wipes, and burnt breakroom coffee that had been sitting on the warmer since noon.

The fluorescent light over my locker flickered every few seconds, making the metal door flash dull silver, then gray, then silver again.

I had been a paramedic long enough to know that exhaustion has a sound.

It is the soft buzz in your ear after too many radio calls.

It is the hollow scrape of your own shoes across tile.

It is the quiet way your hands keep moving even after the emergency is over.

My name is Lauren Mitchell.

I was twenty-eight years old, broke in the ordinary, humiliating way working people are broke, where you do math in the grocery aisle and pretend you are just checking your list.

My checking account had $42.16 in it.

Rent was due Friday.

My electric bill had a red warning printed across the top, and the old Ford pickup I drove had started coughing every morning like it knew I could not afford to replace it.

The EMS department logged me out at 11:17 p.m., but my body did not believe I was off duty.

My shoulders still felt the weight of the radio strap.

My hands still expected gloves.

My ears still waited for the tone that meant somebody else was about to have the worst night of their life.

That was the thing nobody tells you about emergency work.

You can clock out.

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