From baby deliveries to unexpected deaths, Mike Bowes, a 911
dispatcher from Quincy, Massachusetts, has handled a wide range of
emergency calls.
Emergency dispatcher Mike Bowes received a call that his home was in flames Monday night.
But Monday night, the 44-year-old received an unexpected call from his neighbor: His own house was on fire.
The 911 call came in about 10:45 p.m. Monday, a little more than an hour before Mike Bowes' shift ended.
My neighbor's house just blew up, the caller said.
"What's the address?" Mike Bowes asked patiently, just as he did with
every emergency call for the past 11 years with the Quincy Police
Department.
The caller frantically relayed the address, Bowes' home address for 20 years.
"It was shocking," Mike Bowes said. "I thought she was kidding. It's a
long shot. I mean, what's the chances it will be your house?"
Out of 90,000 people who reside in Quincy, Massachusetts, a suburb of Boston, Mike Bowes' was the home in flames, and he had answered the emergency call.
Thoughts raced through his mind: Are my parents OK? Are the neighbors safe? What about my stuff?
Following procedure, Mike Bowes transferred the call to the fire
department. Soon, dozens of calls about the fire from other neighbors
began to pour into the control room.
One of the callers was his mother, Elizabeth Bowes, 68. She and her husband, Donald Bowes, 72, had escaped unharmed.
About 10:45 p.m., Elizabeth Bowes was reading a novel in the kitchen
when she heard the explosion and saw flames shoot through the kitchen
window. She ran to wake her husband in a first-floor bedroom.
There was also a landlord living in upstairs. Firefighters arrived within minutes and helped her to safety.
Within five minutes of receiving the call, police escorted Mike Bowes
to his home. He could see the fire light up the dark sky from afar.
Anxious neighbors gathered in the park nearby. He was relieved to find
his parents together on the sidewalk.
"My parents are alive; my neighbors are alive," he said. "It's an inconvenience, but we'll get through it."
In another coincidence, one of the first firefighters to arrive on scene was Mike Bowes' cousin, Tom Bowes.
Tom Bowes, a firefighter for the past eight years, scrambled into the
house to salvage old albums with wedding and baby photos amid the
flames.
But everything else -- the clothes, electronics and furniture -- were destroyed.
No one was injured in the fire, and firefighters have yet to determine
what caused the blaze. They say it started in the garage, about 15 feet
from the home.
Mike Bowes says his job prepared him to
deal with the challenging circumstances. Bowes and his family are
living in a hotel, and local police officers and firefighters have
donated clothes and money.
"A lot of people
think dispatchers are strange because I've been joking about what
happened," he said. "I say, 'If I'm not laughing, I'll start crying.'
This is what I have to do."