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Horror in the Red Sea             
      
by David Moller       
                           
                         
                            
                    Life seemed good to Martin Richardson as he lounged in the       
                    waters of the Red Sea. It had been a perfect, almost cloudless       
                    day and at 6 p.m.; the water, more than half a mile offshore       
                    from the low, sandy desert hills of the south Sinai Peninsula,       
                    was still bath-water warm.       
                             
                    The wiry, 29-year-old six-footer was three days into a diving       
                    course taught by fellow Briton Harry Hayward. That day, July       
                    23, 1996, he had graduated from routine exercises to some       
                    actual diving. Maneuvering among the clumps of coral in the       
                    crystal-clear sea, he had seen fish in blazing red, yellow       
                    and rainbow colors.       
                             
                    At the end of the day, 23-year-old, fair-haired Hayward congratulated       
                    his student: "That's it. You're a diver now. Just another       
                    couple of deep dives and the rest is mainly theory. You'll       
                    get through it, no problem."       
                             
                    In high spirits, Richardson rejoined the half-dozen others       
                    on board a 75-foot motor yacht, Jadran, for the 50-minute       
                    run back to the Egyptian port of Sharm el Sheikh. Standing       
                    at the upper deck rail, they spotted three adult bottlenose       
                    dolphins and a baby swimming nearby.       
                             
                    Dolphins would often come alongside boats in the Red Sea and       
                    ride their bow waves. If the craft stopped, they would sometimes       
                    stay and play near the swimmers.       
                             
                    Still clad in his swimming trunks, Richardson said, "Let's       
                    swim with the dolphins." Hayward and Dani Hermon, the       
                    skipper's son, joined him, but climbed back the dinghy and       
                    returned to the Jadran when they thought the dolphins had       
                    gone.      
                             
                    As the yacht circled to pick him up, Richardson struck up       
                    a strong crawl to meet it halfway. Tired from the day's diving,       
                    he changed his mind. Why bother? Let the boat come to me.       
                    The whole point of travel is to take thing easy.       
                             
                    After working in America for three years as a technician installing       
                    pollution-monitoring equipment in factories, Richardson had       
                    saved him enough money to take him on an extended tour through       
                    Greece and the Middle East and on, he hoped, to Australia.       
                    Now, happily at once with his surroundings, he trod water,       
                    lapping up the heat and the vast emptiness of the sea and       
                    desert.      
                             
                    Suddenly, he felt something rip into the left side of his       
                    back and saw blood in the water around him. Again there came       
                    the shock of giant teeth ripping into his back. He yelled,       
                    "Shark! Shark!" Once the creature bit into his back,       
                    tearing the flesh.       
                             
                    On the aft deck of the Jadran, Hayward heard Richardson's       
                    cries of anguish and saw him propelled out of the water up       
                    to his waist.       
                             
                    Instantly, Hayward leapt into the dinghy tied to the back       
                    of the yacht. In seconds, he untied the 19-foot craft, started       
                    its outboard engine and was speeding toward Richardson at       
                    full power.       
                             
                    When sharks attack like that, Hayward thought, they usually       
                    continue until their victim is dead. Once a shark smells blood,       
                    it's in a feeding of frenzy.       
                             
                    As the shark moved in again, Richardson saw its rubbery grayish-blue       
                    head. He clenched his right hand and punched with all his       
                    might. But razor-sharp teeth fastened on to his left shoulder       
                    and upper arm, and ripped.       
                    Desperately, Richardson scanned the watch for the shark, to       
                    spot where it would lunge from next. But he could only see       
                    the deep, dark sea. He yelled, willing Hayward to hurry. Please,       
                    God, don't let me die here!       
                             
                    Ten seconds crawled by. Suddenly, unseen, the monster was       
                    back. Ramming against his chest, it sank its teeth into his       
                    right side, then came back to graze his lower stomach.       
                             
                    Summoning his remaining strength, Richardson swam backward       
                    as fast as he could. Blood will attract the shark. Get away       
                    from the blood! But his blood was trailing him in the water.       
                    Frantically he kept pumping his legs. There could be more       
                    than one of them. They could finish me off as a pack.       
                             
                    As Hayward closed in, he noticed a disturbance in the sea       
                    around Richardson. Then he saw the fin of a dolphin cutting       
                    the water by Richardson's head. The dolphins must be circling       
                    him; perhaps they're protecting him. “Harry!” bawled Richardson,       
                    now surrounded by a pool of blood about 13 feet across. "Get       
                    me out of here!" A final terror suffused his mind. My       
                    legs - the shark is going to get my legs!       
                             
                    Richardson's arms were like lead as Hayward hauled him over       
                    the side of the dinghy. Hayward laid him face down on the       
                    wooden planking. Blood pumped out of Richardson's back, splashing       
                    on to Hayward's body and shorts.       
                             
                    Hayward suppressed a gasp when he saw great folds of flesh       
                    hanging loose on Richardson's back. With the ribs exposed,       
                    he thought he could saw his heart, lungs and other vital organs,       
                    but he didn't dare say anything. "It's not too bad,"       
                    he reassured Richardson, as he gunned the motor into full       
                    throttle.      
                             
                    Back at the Jadran, they decided to leave Richardson where       
                    he was. Into the dinghy clambered the yacht's Israeli captain,       
                    54-year-old Itsik Hermon. To stop the bleeding, Hayward and       
                    Hermon packed the lacerated flaps of flesh back against Richardson's       
                    wounds with towels.       
                             
                    Protected from most of the pain by shock, Richardson was mainly       
                    aware of the whine of the Jadran's two 280-horsepower diesel       
                    engines as the craft headed full tilt for port. I've got to       
                    survive, he told himself. Please, God, let me get back to       
                    see my family.       
                             
                    Slowly he became aware of suffocating heat. "I'm so hot,"       
                    he murmured. Bottle after bottle of drinking water was passed       
                    down into the dinghy and poured gently over his head and shoulders.       
                            
                    "I can't breathe," mumbled Richardson. Hayward wondered       
                    whether one of his lungs had been punctured. He got one of       
                    the oxygen cylinders from his diving equipment. But with the       
                    mask on, Richardson found it almost impossible to exhale.       
                    The cylinder was put aside.       
                            
                    "I'm so tired," sighed Richardson, "I just       
                    want to sleep."       
                            
                    "Martin, you must not sleep." Hermon's face was       
                    close to his. "You have to keep awake." During many       
                    years' service with the Israeli army, Hermon had seen a lot       
                    of battlefield casualties in a similar state of shock. He       
                    knew they had to stop Richardson from losing consciousness,       
                    letting slip the will to live.       
                             
                    Hermon piled him with questions about his family, his brother       
                    and three sisters, about all the traveling he had done and       
                    the journeys he still hoped to make. "But now I just       
                    want to sleep," Richardson concluded.       
                             
                    As Hayward poured more water over Richardson's shoulders,       
                    he saw that his eyes were rolling back into his head. He was       
                    losing consciousness. Hayward began talking to him about the       
                    diving course. "You're about the best student I've ever       
                    had. You picked it up very quickly, so we'll definitely finish       
                    the course one day."       
                    Richardson grunted in appreciation. "How much longer       
                    before we get to port?" he asked weakly. Dani Hermon       
                    made a call to Sharm el Sheikh to alert them they had a serious       
                    casualty on board.       
                             
                    Fifty minutes after the attack, the Jadran berthed and Dr.       
                    Magdy Zakaria, a slim, bearded 43-year-old slipped down into       
                    the dinghy. He quickly realized there was nothing he could       
                    do while Richardson still lay in the bloodstained water that       
                    sloshed in the bottom of the boat.       
                             
                    Richardson was eased on to a stretcher, then hoisted on to       
                    the back of a pickup truck for the three-minute drive to the       
                    Hyperbaric Medical Center. Although the center, with its decompression       
                    chamber, dealt mainly with diving casualties, Richardson was       
                    lucky enough to have fallen into the hands of an inspired       
                    trauma surgeon trained not only at Cairo University Medical       
                    School but also in England, Germany and the United States.       
                             
                    As Zakaria unwrapped the blood-soaked towels from Richardson's       
                    body, he noticed the look in the eyes of his assistant Frederique       
                    Dalifard, a 22-year-old on a three-month break from medical       
                    school in Paris. For a moment, he wondered if she would freeze.       
                             
                    Wisely he kept her busy as he fed the first of three pints       
                    of fluid through an intravenous line into Richardson's right       
                    arm, then administered drugs to counteract the shock and pain,       
                    combat infection and help to raise his perilously low blood       
                    pressure. Zakaria estimated he had lost as much as 20 per       
                    cent of his blood.       
                            
                    As she and Zakaria cleaned and bandaged his wounds, Dalifard       
                    reassured Richardson with a constant commentary, "Your       
                    injuries may look bad, but they are really not too serious.       
                    You're going to be all right."       
                             
                    The shark had not removed too much flesh, except on the left       
                    shoulder and back. There, a patch about eight inches square       
                    had been destroyed where the shark had bitten through into       
                    the thoracic cavity, causing the collapse of one lung, and       
                    chewed off portions of two ribs.       
                             
                    Zakaria now faced a major problem. He had installed a chest       
                    tube to drain off blood and fluid. But re-inflating the collapsed       
                    lung required a full-scale surgical procedure for which he       
                    had neither the staff nor the facilities.       
                            
                    Richardson needed to be taken to a well-equipped hospital.       
                    The nearest was a new military facility at El Tur, 62 miles       
                    to the north. But with the Englishman's breathing capacity       
                    down to about 50 per cent and decreasing, Zakaria knew he       
                    would have to try to inflate the lung before he could be moved.       
                             
                    Acting almost instinctively, Zakaria began to improvise something       
                    he had never attempted before. He grabbed the square, sterile       
                    nylon wrapping from inside the chest tube pack. With this       
                    firmly attached to the surrounding skin on three sides, he       
                    fashioned a makeshift flutter valve that would create negative       
                    pressure inside the chest cavity, allowing the collapsed lung       
                    to re-inflate.       
                             
                    After 40 minutes of hectic emergency treatment, they were       
                    ready to set off on the hour-long dash to El Tur. In the ambulance,       
                    Daslifard crouched over Richardson, an arm around his shoulders       
                    and head. She continued to reassure him, "You are doing       
                    very well... It won't be long before we get to hospital...       
                    Dr. Zakaria is taking good care of you."       
                             
                    Zakaria smiled as Richardson murmured, "At least I managed       
                    to punch the brute." The doctor marveled at his spirit.       
                    With those injuries, and so much pain, others would have died       
                    within half an hour.       
                             
                    Richardson, exhausted, hovered on the edge of unconsciousness.       
                    Near the end of the journey he grew restless. "When are       
                    you going to give me something for the pain?" he asked.       
                             
                    Zakaria explained that they already had, "but its effects       
                    are beginning to wear off." He didn't want to administer       
                    more painkillers because they might further suppress Richardson's       
                    circulation or breathing. "We'll be at the hospital soon.       
                    Then we'll give you a proper anesthetic, so we can patch you       
                    up."      
                             
                    As soon as they arrived at the hospital, Richardson was whipped       
                    off to the operating theater. With their patient on his side,       
                    Zakaria and two other doctors worked on him simultaneously,       
                    one on the front, two on the back. It took them three hours       
                    to wire up his damaged ribs, repair the thoracic wall and       
                    close the flesh wounds with almost 300 stitches.       
                             
                    By early afternoon the next day, Richardson was awake; hours       
                    later he was eased out of bed and into a wheelchair. By the       
                    following day, he was able to haul himself out of bed with       
                    the help of a length of bandage tied to the end of the bed.       
                    Determined to regain his usual fitness, he began gentle workouts,       
                    bending down and stretching his muscles.       
                             
                    A week after his admission to the hospital, he discharged       
                    himself to fly home to Britain to see his family and to undergo       
                    skin grafting.       
                             
                    The night before he left, he spent the evening on board the       
                    Jadran, sharing a meal and some beers with his friends under       
                    a starlit sky. With Harry Hayward he pondered the miracle       
                    of his survival. Why had the shark, probably an oceanic white       
                    tip, not come back to finish him off? What could have deterred       
                    it from its usual deadly pattern of attack?       
                             
                    While Richardson had not seen the dolphins once he hit the       
                    water, Hayward remembered how he had sighted them as he sped       
                    to the rescue in the dinghy. "It has to be the dolphins       
                    that got rid of the shark," he concluded.       
                             
                    David George of the Marine Biological Services Division at       
                    London's Natural History Museum agrees. "Dolphins regard       
                    sharks as enemies and can certainly drive them off, even kill       
                    them, by ramming them with their beak-like snouts. They are       
                    also generally friendly toward humans. There have been numerous       
                    instances of dolphins apparently trying to help people in       
                    danger, such as holding a drowning person above water."       
                             
                    Though Martin Richardson accepts that the dolphins saved him,       
                    that remains only a partial explanation. What made the dolphins       
                    come back at just the right moment? He often wonders. God,       
                    too, must have played some part in sending them back to protect       
                    me.      
                         
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