On the way home I was crossing the railway line and was
puzzled to see a woman standing on the track talking into a phone: unusual
thing to do. As I passed she called me back and offered the phone out to me. On
the other end was a police receptionist, and in the course of talking to her
and the woman I worked out without too much trouble that she’d had a couple of
drinks and was threatening to throw herself under the next train, as her sister
had a few months ago. There wasn’t going to be a next train, however, because
the signalman had already held all the trains further along the line. I kept
her talking until the police arrived (in two cars and a van) and bundled her
off to the local mental hospital. Of course she called me every name she could
think of, but then if you’re genuinely determined on offing yourself you don’t
tell anyone about it. I have to say the (all young male) coppers handled it
superbly as far as I could tell, very clearly following an established
procedure for such incidents. It was a strange synchronicity of the world
inside the church and the world outside, and I suppose that had I not been
dressed in clerical gear the woman would never have stopped me.
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