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Story by Vivienne
It is a balmy Summer evening in Sydney. My husband went out for the evening to see the school play the Emperor and the Architect. I decided not to go as we had seen the play in London when it starred Anthony Hopkins and Jim Dale. Having seen the best, I couldn’t imagine how I could sit through the school play version even though hubby had been involved in its production.
There was a reasonably good film on the tele and after about half an hour I heard thump thump coming from the unit above. Gee, I thought, Doreen’s rearranging her Parker furniture again. Quiet, then thump, quiet, thump thump. Heck, must be a big makeover. Then bang at the door and upstairs opposite neighbour breathlessly asks for a woollen blanket. I hand it over, close the door then think – what on earth for? I go upstairs and see smoke coming out from Doreen’s door where my blanket is stuffed.
Have you called the fire brigade? Yes. Good. Where’s Doreen? Oh, she’s still in there. WHAT ? ! At this stage I can’t remember just what I said but I took a big deep breath and opened Doreen’s door and went in to find her. Eyes closed – I couldn’t see a thing – so much thick smoke. My good luck was that her unit was exactly the same as ours and I could find my way around in the dark. Thump, bump – I hear her, she’s in the bedroom. With my arms spread out I find Doreen and manage to scoop her up and half drag her out of the unit, close door and over to the opposite neighbour. By this time other neighbours had gathered and I asked them to comfort Doreen – cup of tea, perhaps a brandy.
The fire brigade still have not arrived. I race downstairs and go outside to view the fire – the balcony is ablaze, it looks rather frightening. I race down the driveway to the road – no sign of fire brigade. Race back to upstairs neighbour – ring the fire brigade again. Back downstairs to see how the fire looks – not good. All this went on for some time – another sprint down the driveway – I look up the road and there is the fire brigade at the wrong address, about 100 yards up. Running, yelling, follow me the fire is this way. Well, amazingly from the road there was no sign of fire, let alone smoke. The brigade drive down after me and two of the fire chaps run with me, with axes in hand. Within minutes the fire is out – big mess.
Back to Doreen – she is in shock, she looks a wreck, her toes are burnt, her face is smudgy black – but basically she is okay. It was at this stage that it finally dawned on me as to why the opposite neighbours were very blasé (oh, she’s still in there !) – they were pissed.
One of the downstairs neighbours offered to put Doreen up for the night, I went back to see the closing credits of the film. Hubby arrived home. I told him he’d missed an exciting evening and I’m so glad I didn’t go to see the play because if I had gone Doreen might well be dead and our units burnt to the ground. I finally went to the bathroom and saw myself – half my eyebrows were gone, my eyelashes were suddenly very short and I had a sort of mohawk hair style. I was filthy as well. I took the next day off work and helped sort out Doreen who was still in shock and totally incapable of doing anything to help herself. I took over and sorted out her insurance claim, got her into a motel, arranged for assessors access etc. I inspected her unit – nothing escaped the smoke and water damage but the fire was mainly at the balcony end and some of the seagrass matting was burnt. What caused the fire – Doreen had put up new curtains and put some candles nearby to admire them. They caught fire. The rest you know.
Doreen recovered and was grateful for all my help. My efforts went unreported until now.

Well done Viv
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A giant Congratulations to you Vivienne. I expect you take great comfort in knowing how you handle an emergency situation.
I suppose Big could tell us, but it seems this must have been Some Time Ago, as I would have imagined that these days there’d be some kind of automatic official debrief for you.
As for the neighbours being pissed, before that became an excuse they’d have to be way too far gone to get down for a blanket, let alone get back and stuff it under the door. I learnt more than I wanted to know about a near neighbour by how she responded to a problem with another neighbour’s pet. Now I know who/what she is. If there is ever an emergency, that knowledge could make all the difference.
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Yes, some time ago – I was 25 at the time. There was no questioning or report writing – the brigade came, put it out and went. It was probably about 15 years ago when newspapers and tv began to constantly report on the heroics of people doing small and sensible things in emergencies – and I said to myself, gee I really did save a woman from a fire. The thought of an award never entered my head at the time and it still doesn’t matter but I am glad to have now shared the real life story of what happened.
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Well done Vivie!
Pigs’ hero for sure!
Only candles in the mou house are there for emergencies, in case the power goes away and it’s dark and the torches don’t work.
Hate leaving lit things around.
Poor Doreen! It’s a wonder her neighbours didn’t start dancing around the flames! It’d be kind to call them dickheads.
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Yes,
candles are cosy and atmospheric but a bit risky. I suppose, another drink by the neighbours and Doreen might well have been gone forever. Just as well you stayed home and were alert.
Did the firemen not put in some kind of recommendation for you? You should have been hoisted up on their shoulders with garlands of daffodils around your neck, and taken around during the annual ‘fire-men’s ball.’
My brothers caused a huge fire back in 1955 or so. They burnt a disused town-hall playing with candles. We were lucky Australia allowed us in the year after.
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Went out to the theatre leaving a young couple looking after the small open-sided NQ wood and galvanised iron forest house…and babysitters to three sleeping children. Back at home a candle the couple lit and left too close to the corner of a beautiful Indian cotton bedspread hung as a decorative wall from the roof beam opposite the entrance door caught the fabric alight.
When I stepped in the place it was momentarily beyond me I could see nothing but a black expanse and the dim outline of trees …where before the king size bedspread hung with its swirls of red, blue and yellow against a cream calico background. Left was a scrap fringe the length of the wall about 30 cms hanging from the tacks that secured the bedspread to the beam.
How those two saved the day after all I cannot tell. All other memory of their story of what happened has long gone out of my head likely as result of the shock.
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Gee shoe, sounds like they were lucky
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Bloody women and their candles!!
Viv, I’m nominating you for the Window Dresser’s Bravery Award. See how you go. Foodge and Merv ARE the committee!
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Some wanker forgot to change the name!
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A twin brother, maybe?
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Bloody men with their smoking and booze…
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Dad was a firemean. When he’d arrive home, we’d all ask about work. At least once a week there was a house/unit burnt to the ground. The most common reason; ‘bloody woman cooking chips, two; bloody idiot smoking in bed, number three; bloody idiots with candles.
We never had chips or candles, and no-one smoked inside, in spite of Dad being a heavy smoker!
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Bloody boys and their love of fire.
I remember being fascinated by floating my father’s cigarette lighter petrol on top of water in my mother’s granite kitchen sink and then lighting it with a match.
How something could burn floating on top of water was spell bounding.
I am lucky to be alive.
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Viv, you stayed home because you sensed that something was going to happen; it was the Sagittarian’s sixth sense at play here 🙂
I have a maternal aunt, who was never surprised at anything, she kind of sensed what was coming next.
We are very proud of you Viv, and lucky to count you among the Piglets…
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Well that does seem to happen to me a lot (for a long time) – but on this occasion it was a complete fluke, just luck, that I was at home and saved the day.
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The quick witted action you employed to save Doreen!!
I was glad to know beforehand from the title, Viv, that somebody saved somebody! It made the reading less fraught with tension.
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They stuffed the blanket under the door and left Doreen inside? That’s terrible!
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Not the full doona, that lot, by the looks of it, Lehan!
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