Inside the Secret Society That Brings Emergency Medicine to Monsters

Series: Extreme Medical Services Prequel  |  Author: Jamie Davis  |  FREE Download

Somewhere in Elk City, a werewolf could be having a hypoglycemic episode. A vampire might be dealing with a companion’s severe blood loss. An angel could be working the night shift in the ER. And when any of them need emergency help, one specialized unit is ready to respond — without exposing anyone’s secret.

 

This is the world of Station U, the fictional paramedic unit at the heart of Jamie Davis’s Extreme Medical Services series. In The Vampire and the Paramedic, Davis gives us a detailed look at how this world actually works — the history, the infrastructure, and the enormous effort it took to build.

 

A Century in the Making

The coexistence between humans and Unusuals didn’t happen overnight. Davis traces it through James’s perspective — 1,674 years of watching humanity evolve, and watching his own community adapt alongside it.

 

  • Medieval Era: Witch hunts and monster-killing rampages. Fear ruled on both sides.
  • ~70 Years Ago: WWII. Nazi collaboration with certain shapeshifter tribes finally pushed the Unusual community to take sides with the Allies.
  • The Last 150 Years: An uneasy truce. Unusuals integrated into a shadow government working alongside human leadership.
  • Present Day: Dr. Spirelli creates Station U — a 911-linked paramedic unit serving the Unusual population. The first of its kind, with federal eyes watching.

How Station U Actually Works

🔬 UV Identification: Station U paramedics carry a special ink stamp only visible under ultraviolet light. Unusual patients can immediately confirm they’re talking to a safe, informed responder.

📡 Flagged Dispatch: The 911 computer system flags registered Unusual callers. When James calls in the accident, his number automatically routes to Station U — the right crew, every time.

🚑 Dedicated Ambulance: James funds a dedicated Station U ambulance to eliminate the risk of Unusuals being transported by uninformed crews who might witness a mid-transport shift.

 

The Federal Dimension

One of Davis’s cleverest details is making Station U a nationally watched pilot program. If it works in Elk City, it can be replicated in larger cities across the country. James’s funding isn’t just local generosity — it’s an investment in a model that could transform healthcare access for the entire hidden Unusual population.

 

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