Almost as soon as she walked into the Southeast D.C. firehouse that’s home to Engine Company 19 on Christmas Eve, a mother found herself wiping away tears of gratitude.
Back in March, Cierra Duckett was in a car on Minnesota Avenue Southeast: She was going into labor, but was less than 30 weeks along. She was in pain, and the baby wasn鈥檛 waiting. Her husband flagged down passing firefighters.
Firefighter and trained medic Terrika Hooks remembered the frantic appeal for help.
“We were on our way to another call,” Hooks said. But it was obvious Duckett needed their help.
The experienced medic said Duckett suddenly shrieked that the baby was coming. “We looked, and the baby was right there,” Hooks said.
But baby ZaNiyah Peterson was delivered still inside the amniotic sack 鈥 Hooks had to cut the infant from the sack, and found the baby wasn鈥檛 breathing.
Duckett said it was scary. She could overhear the first responders working on her baby.
“They kept saying she wasn鈥檛 looking too good,” Duckett said. 鈥淏ut we had hope and we had faith 鈥 and she鈥檚 a fighter. She really fought for her life.”
On Tuesday, nine months later, Duckett visited the firehouse to thank the team that saved her baby. She stood at a podium and handed out awards to Hooks, and firefighters Shamia Pardlow, Jamil Blackman, Monique Smith and Capt. Tyrone Jenkins.
Pardlow had only been on the job two days when the team was called to help Duckett and her baby. She recalled how tiny ZaNiyah was.
鈥淪he fit in the palm of my hands,鈥 Pardlow said. 鈥淎nd I have small hands!鈥
To see how ZaNiyah is now thriving, Pardlow said, 鈥淚鈥檓 just so happy. She鈥檚 my Christmas gift, too!”
Duckett said she knows that ZaNiyah鈥檚 too young to understand now, but she often tells her baby the story of her birth. 鈥淛ust to let her know that she was a miracle 鈥 she was saved.鈥
