The Paramedic Denver Ignored Until One Dead Man Needed Her-Ginny

Everyone at the Denver collapse froze when Dr. Alistair Finch called Frank Miller dead.

That should have been the end of it.

At a disaster scene, the words time of death carry a weight that makes even firefighters lower their eyes.

Image

They are not just medical words.

They are permission to stop.

But Susan Jones did not move away from Frank’s airway.

The east wing of Riverton Lofts had fallen less than an hour earlier in a gray roar that made windows rattle four blocks away.

By the time the first ambulance rolled up, the street already smelled like concrete dust, torn insulation, diesel exhaust, and broken water lines.

A pipe hissed somewhere under the wreckage.

Saw blades screamed against steel.

Radios cracked in every direction.

The building had been a renovation site, half apartments and half exposed bones, with scaffolding still hugging one side and stacks of drywall waiting in plastic wrap near the curb.

Now the whole eastern section looked like it had folded inward on itself.

Concrete slabs leaned at impossible angles.

Rebar twisted out of the dust like wire pulled from an old fence.

Firefighters crawled over the pile with saws, spreaders, ropes, and the grim patience of people trained to keep looking long after hope becomes thin.

Susan stood beside her ambulance with her jump bag strapped tight across her shoulder.

She was not the loudest medic on the scene.

She was not the biggest.

She had a way of standing still that made people think she was waiting for instructions when she was actually reading everything.

The tilt of a wall.

The movement of the dust.

The gap beneath a collapsed beam.

The sound of voices traveling from one pocket of rubble to another.

Captain Brody noticed her about twelve minutes after she arrived.

He was a broad man with soot on his cheek and a radio clipped high on his shoulder, the kind of fire captain who had been obeyed for so long that his instructions came out already shaped like facts.

He looked Susan over once.

Then he pointed toward the green triage tent.

“Jones, keep the walking wounded organized.”

Susan knew what that meant.

Take the easy ones.

Bandage the ones still standing.

Do not clog the rescue lane.

Do not get underfoot.

A young firefighter nearby muttered that she looked like a strong gust could carry her down the block.

Read More