Series: Extreme Medical Services Prequel | Author: Jamie Davis | FREE Download
James had never called for help in 1,674 years. Not through the Black Death. Not through world wars. Not through any catastrophe that had punctuated his impossibly long existence. But there he was — crouching on a rain-slicked street beside the burning wreckage of his car, his trusted companion Rudolph bleeding out from a mangled arm — and James was dialing 911.
This is the opening scene of The Vampire and the Paramedic by Jamie Davis, and it immediately tells you everything about what makes the Extreme Medical Services series unlike any urban fantasy you’ve read before. This isn’t a story about hunting monsters. It’s about what happens when the creatures of myth quietly integrate into modern society — and realize they need ambulances just like everyone else.
The World of Unusuals
Jamie Davis — a real-life nurse and retired paramedic — built the Extreme Medical Services world on a simple but brilliant premise: vampires, werewolves, angels, and every creature of myth have been quietly living alongside humanity for centuries. Not hiding exactly, but carefully coexisting in a shadow arrangement with human governments and community leaders who know the truth.
In Elk City, that arrangement has a medical arm: Station U. It’s a specialized paramedic unit created specifically to serve the Unusual population. The paramedics even carry a special ink stamp on their hand that’s only visible under ultraviolet light — so Unusual patients can immediately identify a trustworthy, informed responder just by looking.

A Paramedic Worth 1,674 Years of Waiting
Brynne Garvey — the paramedic who responds to James’s 911 call — is something else. Standing barely five foot two, she arrives on scene and immediately takes command. She applies a tourniquet to Rudolph’s mangled arm with precise, practiced efficiency, even as the werewolf thrashes and growls, threatening to shift into wolf form. She doesn’t flinch. She doesn’t hesitate. She keeps their secret from the other paramedics on scene.
For James, a man accustomed to 1,674 years of absolute deference, it’s a profoundly disorienting experience — in the best possible way. He finds himself instinctively following her instructions. A vampire lord, taking orders from a human paramedic half his size.
Why This Story Hits Different
Most paranormal stories feature a human stumbling into a secret supernatural world. The Vampire and the Paramedic flips that: the supernatural world is reaching out — cautiously, carefully — to access the human medical system it increasingly needs. The tension isn’t whether monsters are real. It’s whether trust can be built across a gap that spans centuries of fear and myth.
Davis brings his real EMS background to every scene. The medical details are accurate. The protocols are real. And that groundedness makes the supernatural elements feel all the more vivid by contrast.
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