Death and the Bus Driver
by
Charles H. Featherstone
by Charles H. Featherstone
Well, I was
all set to write a marvelous little essay for LRC about the foolishness
of "We the People" and the idiocy of popular sovereignty.
It’s been bumping around in mind for several weeks, and in between
mixing songs for my new CD of mostly original songs (which should
be formally released to a hungry and desperate world soon) and trudging
to and from work, I’ve have been meaning to write it.
But then BLAM!
Wednesday night, my wife got run over by a bus. So that essay will
have to wait.
It may sound
like s sick joke and getting hit by a bus was always my stock
line for anything randomly bad that could happen to you. For example,
when I was in Saudi Arabia, the week after the big attack on the
residential compound in Riyadh in November, 2004, my boss made clear
to everyone of us frightened Americans that, in fact, you could
die anywhere. So don’t be too worried about dying in Saudi Arabia,
he continued.
"True
enough," I thought. "Still, I’d rather get hit by bus
back home than get gunned down or blown up here."
It was a good
joke. But now I’ll have to find another.
Jennifer is
fine. Well, as fine as you can be having been driven down by a city
bus. She was crossing the street on her bicycle at the crosswalk
when the bus, seeing the same green light, decided to make a right
turn without checking for pedestrians. The driver, oblivious to
the cyclist suddenly underneath his wheel, did not stop until her
screaming and pounding on the side of the bus forced him to. By
that time, her right foot was already pined underneath a front wheel.
Folks came running, and the police and paramedics showed up quickly
too. In fact, one police officer had to prevent the driver from
moving my wife after the driver stopped the bus and got out to check
exactly what the commotion was all about.
I have all
this second hand, from my wife and the police report (the police
officer doing the investigation told me he had cited the bus driver).
I was not there, I was on my way home from work at the time, and
only learned that something was up when I noticed one of my business
cards stuck in the knocker on the front door of our apartment with
the words "Call the Alexandria EMS Supervisor" and a phone
number. That began my meltdown, with horrid visions of Jennifer
on life support in the ICU or lying dismembered on a cold slab in
the county morgue racing through my mind. Seeing only one bicycle
in our apartment (I had taken the bus to work that cold, windy day)
intensified it. It took some struggling with our crummy phone line
(Jennifer keeps the mobile) before I could figure out where she
was and what was wrong. Friends from church some of the kindest
people I know helped get me to Fairfax Hospital and stayed with
me until the wee dark hours of the morning, when, doped and sewed
up, she was sent home.
As I said,
she’s fine. Only two small fractures, one each in her two smallest
toes. Her foot is fine, more or less, though it was pretty torn
up and it took the internist more than two hours to sew it up (It
looks a little like some mad doctor put a new-found foot on her,
but it was just the gash, which I watched the internist stitch).
Considering how badly it could have ended she was, after
all, run over by a bus she’s very, very fortunate. She’s
resting now, her foot propped high on the arms of one of our sofa,
her big gray eyes having gotten back a little bit of their wonderful
sparkle. We have alternately watched Wallace & Grommit shorts
and Firefly
episodes today, when I wasn’t out getting her meds or trying to
catch a few winks between her walker-assisted trips to the bathroom.
But her eyes,
right now, the eyes of a small, very frightened child. "Chuckie,
will it ever not hurt again? Will I ever be well again?"
Of course you
will be well, my dearest little one. You shall walk and dance again.
And we shall get you another bicycle, too. The manager of the bike
shop where I sometime moonlight has already said you can borrow
a bike when you’re ready to ride again. And somewhere there is a
big inflatable suit or a giant gerbil-ball that we can get that
will keep you safe from all the errant bus drivers of the world.
(Am I negligent
in wanting to get her another bicycle? Tell me, dear readers, are
there not also grizzly and unpleasant ways to be injured and die
in automobiles? Do you not remember those films from high school?
You pay your money, you takes your chances. There are, as my boss
at the Saudi Gazette said, a myriad ways to die. An anvil could
fall on you, for example…)
In between
here and there, I shall take care of you, help you to the bathroom,
dress your wound, tell you stories, make you dinner, and keep you
company. While the Vicodin dulls the pain of the gazillion stitches
in your foot, the rum does a pretty good job for me, and probably
put that pink back in my cheeks you said a few minutes ago you were
so happy to see. I’m sorry I cannot make the pain go away. If I
could take your pain as my own, I would do so. In an instant. I’m
sorry I cannot.
I owe a lot
of people thanks. To the young man who my wife said held her hand
while she lay injured in the street, before help arrived, who told
her everything was going to be okay, I am very grateful for your
kindness and compassion, whoever you are. For all those others who
heard her screams and rushed to her aid, I am also thankful. It
is things like that which assure me that human beings are capable
of helping those in need. And gulp! for the police and the
paramedics, for the flight crew of the medical evacuation helicopter,
and for the staff at the Fairfax Hospital Trauma Center, I also
thank you.
And for all
the people at Peace Lutheran Church in that netherworld between
Alexandria and Falls Church, thanks for being there and thanks for
helping me take care of Jennifer.
I need to go
make dinner now. Eventually I hope to get some sleep. And then,
eventually, Jennifer and I will figure out what to do with the City
of Alexandria and its bus service.
In the meantime,
if you could include Jennifer in your prayers, we would both appreciate
that greatly.
January
27, 2006
Charles
H. Featherstone [send
him mail] is a Washington, D.C.-based journalist specializing
in energy, the Middle East, and Islam. He lives with his wife Jennifer
in Alexandria, Virginia.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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