“Okay boss”

For a moment, Lucien had had second thoughts--mainly because his pilot had not questioned him.  He’d heard a hint of concern, but the chopper was lowering all the same.  From this height he could see a number of vehicles, and none of them seemed to be moving.

“Caesar--what about the land vehicles--they aren’t moving.”

“When they get an up close and personal with my whirly bird--I guarantee--the sea will part, just like it did for Moses.”

Lucien gave his pilot credit because--the sea parted indeed.  When the chopper hovered meters from the ground--land transports and automobiles scattered, making room for the helicopter to land.  When Caesar gave him the thumbs up, Lucien jumped out on the passenger side, making his way to the accident victim.

He shouted over his shoulder, directing Caesar in how best to help.

“Check the driver of in the van--see if he’s injured--and if he isn’t, make certain he stays put.  The same goes for the servers--I want everybody to remain here.  They will all need to give a statement to the police and the detective, if one arrives--and tell them to be quiet and not to talk until the Delors’ solicitor gets here”

Overhead, an amplified voice blared from speakers mounted on the police helicopter.  The officer was issuing directions to the crowd instructing them to disperse and make room for the ground patrol and the approaching medical flight vehicle.

Lucien didn’t hesitate.  He ran to the front of the van, and everyone moved when they saw his white coat flapping in the wind.  They were surprised to see a man of his caliber on the streets; wearing white and preparing to get his hands dirty.  Lucien passed the crowds and he cursed, mouthing...

“Worthless horde.  Not one of them is sober enough to help.”

When the crowd was to his rear, he headed straight for the person lying motionless in the street.  He removed his white duster, to use as a headrest. A pain shot through his chest when he realized the person who’d been hit was a woman.  He lowered to the ground and he could swear that he’d heard her whispering something--maybe a prayer, or perhaps a name.  Lucien cradled her head, then he eased her neck up, ever so slightly to place his coat on the ground as a makeshift pillow.

By the shape of the body, he’d rightly surmised that she was young--perhaps, nineteen or twenty.  Her face was covered by long black hair.  Lucien parted the strands and his eyes widened at first glance.  He was amazed by his first impression because there was something about these events that should have been antiseptic, clinical and most certainly dispassionate.  But his heart told him otherwise because instead of mere concern, Lucien was drawn to her natural beauty, and the fact that to his eyes, she was a vision worth beholding.

Lucien tried to remain on point.  He’d never dabbled in first-aid and he didn’t know what this situation called for; but he believed, if he comforted her, his strength would give her the will to survive.  On that thought, she drew in a breath, then the air rushed out on the tail of a low moan.

Lucien stroked her cheek with his thumb, he wondered what was taking the medical transport so bloody long.  This was an emergency, for goodness sake.  The area was swarming with people, and he’d heard the amplified voice from the officer, directing the crowd from the sky--but he didn’t hear the blare of the medical transport.

“Move”, the voice had said--”make way for incoming aircrafts”

In spite of their urgent cries, Lucien was alone, so he thought it best to encourage this woman.

“Hang on--I’ll stay with you, until help arrives.”

He watched the flutter of long dark lashes, and witnessing this lodged a lump in the rear of his throat.  Who was this woman, he thought to himself.  At that moment, he felt a controlled whirling wind hovering directly above him.  He didn’t bother looking up--instead, he kept his eyes trained on this broken dove.  She gasped, and Lucien wasn’t sure what this sound had meant.  He comforted her saying...

“My name is Lucien--Lucien Delors.  Can you tell me your name?”

He didn’t expect an answer and the woman didn’t supply one.  More importantly, he didn’t know why he’d told her his name--but for some strange reason, her knowing was important to him.  He looked at her battered broken body and he wondered how this had happened.  Had she fallen in the street, or had she been pushed?  He was low enough to smell her aroma, and except for the smell of soap, he didn’t detect anything that would hint, she’d been drinking.  In the distance he could hear Caesar telling the van driver of the transport to stop talking.  His pilot wanted this man to reserve his right to have legal counsel present before he told his side of the story.  Lucien didn’t know what was going wrong because Caesar’s urging was being ignored.

“It was an accident man.  Somebody pushed her--but with so many people on the street--it’s going to be impossible to finger the person responsible for all of this.  Oh God, oh God--what a way to start the new year.  It was an accident man...”

The driver of the Delors’ van had repeatedly said the same sentence over and over again.  If it was within his power, Lucien would have removed this woman from this place.  He didn’t know her but she had a face that told him she was a gentle spirit--and for whatever the reason was--he felt partly to blame.  The driver was a staffer and the van was owned by his family.  He wanted to cradle this woman in his arms but he didn’t dare move her for fear of worsening her injuries.

Lucien could hear the rapid approach of footfalls.

“Step aside sir...”

Lucien felt a hand nudging his shoulder.  He was being urged to move aside by one of the medical technicians.  Two men knelt on either side of the young woman, then each man began administering care.  Their hands moved so fast, he couldn’t say with any certainty, which task had been administered first.  An intravenous catheter was inserted, then the tech squeezed a bag filled with liquid between tightly palmed hands.  The other tech snapped buttons off her shirt, spreading the fabric to place EKG leads in different areas on her chest.  He switched on the machine, then covered her nose and mouth with a mask to administer oxygen. Out the side of his eyes, something caught his attention.  When the tech had moved her arm to start the IV, it was then that he clearly recognized the object.  It was a wristband, not to far from her outstretched hand.  The technicians had been so busy working to stabilize her for transport, neither of them noticed the object.  Lucien lowered, and no one observed him because all eyes were trained on the victim.  He lifted the band, then he curled his fingers to palm it.  He’d heard stories about the Samaritan’s and their marriage rituals.  Unmarried Samaritans wore one black band on their left wrist.  When they are betrothed the women wear two braided black bands on their left wrist, and the men wear one blue band.  That’s what puzzled Lucien.  He was staring at this woman lying in the street and her wrist was bare.  When he’d picked up the band, he’d made note of its size and he was certain, that the band had not been made to fit a woman’s wrist.  At least, not the woman currently injured in the street.  By the size of her hand and fingers, he judged her to be small boned--petite; just like his sister Chantel.

Lucien watched the medical techs, frantically working to save her life and within him, he sensed a gnawing question.  Was she married or not?  Did the band belong to her--or a male Samaritan who wanted her to wear his band?  He didn’t understand his curiosity but he wanted to know these answers.

Lucien’s gaze was drawn to his duster--the coat that had been white.  When he noticed an expanding red circle, his brows rose in concern.  When he’d knelt by her side, Lucien had been drawn to the deep shade of black that colored her hair.  Now her glorious mane had a lacquered sheen; a glaze all due to her seeping blood.  Dear God, would this ever end.  Apart from News telecast, Lucien had never witnessed illness or death firsthand.  But here it was--and he didn’t like it.  More to the point; this wasn’t what he wanted for this woman.  Not now--not ever and he didn’t know what gave him the right to feel this way; given that he didn’t even know her name.  Amidst all the blood and her twisted broken body; he wanted a good outcome for this woman.  She was too young for her life to be cut short.


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