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“There were the remains of a hamburger squashed into the tarmac a few inches from her face,” he said. He seemed angry about this. “She deserved better. She was just doing her shopping.”

Then he said something no punter had ever said to me.

“You must be so tired.” His voice had dropped. “We’ve been here for hours and I haven’t seen you stop. All this life and death must leave you like a gutted fish.”

I looked at him, surprised. That was exactly how it felt.

“I’m OK,” I said after a moment. Tiredness was something that my mother, and then my job, had trained me to override. “But I like the imagery.”

“Have you sat down today, rested?” His eyes traveled down to my ID badge. I watched him read my name and then look at my photo.

“I haven’t, no. There’s not much of that in this job. Especially when I’m on call.”

“You can’t sneak off to a cupboard for a lie-down?”

“I mean, I could. But then my bleeper would go off just as I was getting comfy among the mops and Hibiscrub refills.”

He thought about this. “I could hover nearby with your bleeper. Guard the cupboard and then knock if the bleeper went off.”

“It certainly sounds relaxing. The cleaning cupboard floor, a stranger outside the door. I’m sure I’d drift off in no time.”

He smiled. “I’ll vouch for you if that officer does complain,” he said. “You were very impressive back there. Are you still quite junior?”

I nodded.

“I only ask because of the way people spoke to you. You looked like you’d actually been doing this sort of thing for decades.” He laughed suddenly. “Until you lost it. That really was good.”

I smiled. “I’m mortified. Look, I’d better get going.”

I didn’t want to go.

“She looked so small,” he said, ignoring me. This was to become another feature of our relationship: me erecting barriers that Johan politely walked around. Occasionally it would irritate me, but most of the time I’d end up laughing at myself. Nobody had taught me to do that until Johan.

He studied a crack in the ceiling tiles that had been poorly filled with something yellow. When he spoke, his voice had changed. “She thought I was her son.”

I leaned in to hear him better, but that was a mistake. He smelled far too good.

“She saw me again and said,Hello, darling, I missed you, please don’t leave your mama again. I’m scared.”

I saw a lot of emotion in my job. More than I could handle, a lot of the time; the shouting and tears in A&E did not sit well with my preference for controlled conditions. But this man’s grief for the woman in resus, fighting for her life, really touched me.

My bleeper went off and we both glanced down at it.

“Deniz?” he asked.

“I can’t say.” But it would be Deniz, and he could tell by my face; right from the start, he was able to read me. Deniz was being moved to ICU shortly. They probably wanted me back to do the transfer.

“Take good care.” It was the most I felt I could say.

“You take good care, too,” he said, smiling. He stood tall, looking down at me, and those eyes seemed to be saying things they had no business saying.

I turned to head back into the ED, but he called me back.

He got a pen and a small notebook out of his bag. It was a very organized bag. Blue canvas. Even his hands looked tanned, in spite of it being January. I kept noticing that feather of white paint on his wrist.

“I hope Deniz does have a family,” he said, writing in the notebook and tearing out the sheet. “But if she doesn’t, and if she asks for me, I want to be there for her. Is that OK? Can you ask the hospital to call me?”

“Of course.” I took the paper. “She’s very unlikely to remember anything about today, but you never know.”