Ach, why should I protect him, since he’s such a
shameless yarn-spinner?
Eamon McArdle swore this was one of his more amusing
experiences when he worked on Daisy Hill's ambulance crew.
[The name below has been altered to protect the
innocent victim of this tale!]
‘Martin Savage was very proud of his skills as an
amateur mechanic – and as a DIY guy generally – and his wife was indeed
very house-proud. She had just persuaded
him to add a new pavoired patio and on that afternoon, it was out there that he
was stripping the engine of his new ‘baby’ – a shining Harley-Davidson
motor-bike.
He had this gem parked on the new patio and he was
using some rags and an old chamber-pot filled with petrol to remove grease and
dirt.
When he finished, he kick-started the engine to test
it. Unfortunately, holding the
handlebars to steady the machine, he accidentally engaged the gears and
released the clutch. The bike shot off
its rest and pitched forward through the new patio doors, finally coming to
rest in a spreading pool of its own oil on the wife’s beautiful new snow-white
living-room carpets.
His alarmed wife rushed from her kitchen where she had
been working. She found him crumpled on
the patio, badly cut from the shards of broken glass from the patio doors. She called the ambulance and dutifully tended his wounds
while awaiting its arrival. The
paramedics whisked him off to Daisy Hill in their ambulance.
He had no bones broken so she stayed behind
to clear up as best she could. The last
thing she did was empty the contents of the chamber-pot down the toilet bowl
but she hadn’t time to flush it before the imminent return of her bandaged husband was
announced by a persistent ringing of the doorbell below.
Still suffering a slight concussion, Martin stumbled
around from room to room. Finally he
entered the toilet and lit up a cigarette to steady his nerves. Before he finished he dropped the lighted
cigarette between his legs and into the bowl below.
There was a sudden VROOMMMM sound and a jet
of flame enveloped poor Martin.
His wife heard the terrible sound of her husband's screams and rushed upstairs
to his aid again. She found her husband
lying on the floor with his trousers blown away and burns on his buttocks. Again she rang the ambulance and within five
minutes the same crew – including my friend Eamon, promptly arrived.
It was after they had loaded him on to a stretcher
and as they were carefully carrying him downstairs, that the whole story was
recounted to them.
The
guy in front laughed so much that he let go his hold of the stretcher and
Martin rolled off and down the stairs, sustaining two leg fractures.
The
crew was temporarily suspended, pending an enquiry. But within a month they were cleared of any
wrongdoing and were back on duty.
I
didn’t know whether to believe Eamon, until I heard the story retold from many
different parts of the world.
It couldn’t
really have originated in Crazy Hill, could it?