As I was returning from a morning reading the paper down Coogee Beach, I noticed a man on the brink of what looked like a heart attack. He was clenching his chest, wobbling over the footpath and heading to a tree which he gripped onto.
I felt my insides freeze up. I looked around the main street of Coogee to find that I was the only person in the immediate vicinity.
Panic. This one was mine. I rushed over to the man.
“Are you OK?” I asked. Clearly he wasn’t.
“Is it your chest?” I asked.
He grabbed onto me, his whole body was shaking, he was heavy.
I looked around for help.
“Will I call an ambulance?” I said.
“No, no,” he said.
“Are you sure?” I was freaked , grabbed my phone with one hand, ‘I’m calling an ambulance.”
“No, not an ambulance, just help me home,” he said shaking, leaning on me, pale as a ghost, stinking.
Somebody else was rushing to my aide. An American tourist with a busted nose. He asked the man some more questions. The man assured us he would be okay if we could just help him home. I held onto one side of the man, and the American tourist held the other side.
“Where do you live?” I asked.