A gesture of compassion
Marisa O’Neil
Shirley McCormack was settled down, reading her Sunday paper the
morning of Feb. 13 when the knock came at her door.
At first glance she thought they were police officers, judging by
their black uniforms. Then McCormack, the mother of a Santa Clara
County fire captain, realized who they were and why they were there.
The battalion chief and the chaplain from the Orange County Fire
Authority came to inform McCormack that her son, 36-year-old Mark
McCormack, had died earlier that morning. He was fighting a house
fire in Los Gatos when he was electrocuted by a power line.
“I couldn’t even breathe,” the Newport Beach resident said as she
recalled hearing the news. “My heart felt like it was coming out of
my chest.”
The battalion chief and chaplain called 911 and stayed with her
until Newport Beach paramedic Adam Novak and his crew arrived and
took her to Hoag Hospital.
It was the first sign of the support local firefighters and those
in Mark McCormack’s department have shown his mother and the rest of
his family since his death.
“I went to her house [the next day] and asked, ‘Is there anything
we could do for you?’” Newport Beach Fire Capt. Jeff Boyles said.
“She said, ‘Well, I could use a ride to the airport.’”
Thursday morning, Boyles and other Newport Beach firefighters made
good on their offer. They picked up Shirley McCormack, her mother and
two daughters to take them to John Wayne Airport for their flight to
San Jose for her son’s memorial service.
“When they actually showed up ... we went outside and there was a
hook and ladder, another huge engine, a paramedic van,” she said.
“All these guys got out of their engines. They couldn’t have been
nicer. It went from there, and it’s been like that ever since.”
Once they got to San Jose, they got more of the same. Firefighters
they’d just met in December -- when Mark McCormack was promoted to
captain -- picked them up at the airport and put them up at a local
hotel, with one assigned to make sure all of the family’s needs were
taken care of.
“It just blows your mind,” Shirley McCormack said. “They really
scoop you right up and wrap you up in love and affection, whether
they knew him or not.”
That meant firehouse dinners, rides wherever they wanted and
firefighters waiting outside the home of his widow, high-school
sweetheart Heather McCormack, in case she needed anything.
Shirley McCormack said she had no idea of the level of kinship
firefighters feel for one another and for the families of fallen
firefighters.
“It’s important to us to take care of family,” Boyles said. “They
take the brunt of our profession. They deal with the kids, the leaky
roof, all of those things while we’re gone at work, sometimes for
days at a time.”
Mark McCormack was the kind of firefighter who always wanted to be
a better firefighter, his mother said. Ever since he was badly burned
by a stove as a child in his Capistrano Beach home, he was fascinated
by those whose job it was to help others.
He started his career as an explorer scout for a South County fire
department and later worked as a paramedic for private ambulance
companies. He also spent time with the Orange County Fire Authority
and as a firefighter for the California Department of Forestry before
taking the job in Santa Clara, his mother said.
There, he worked on the hazardous materials team and on the
department’s Honor Guard.
Saturday’s service, at HP Pavilion in San Jose, drew about 3,000
people and firefighters from more than 100 departments statewide, she
said.
A procession of firetrucks, including one that came from Dana
Point where Mark McCormick once worked, drove through the streets,
drawing crowds who saluted the family as they rode past.
“There’s the obvious pain you feel because he’s your son and he’s
dead,” Shirley McCormack said Monday at her home as she choked back
tears. “You have to look at all that ... when they brought in his
jacket and boots and put them on the stage. They had his new helmet
sitting on top of his casket. And then the bagpipes and the honor
guard ... I was overwhelmed.
“As a parent, you already know how special your child is. But then
you find out how special everyone else thinks your child is.”
Mark McCormack was a good son, she said, the kind who rented a car
and drove from San Jose to pick up his mother and bring her back to
visit when flights were canceled following the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks. And the kind who phoned his mother late one night to tell
her how excited he was that he’d just saved an infant’s life.
No matter what, he always looked on the positive side of things.
And he would have treated the family of any other firefighter with
the amount of caring his was shown, his mother said.
“The comforting thing is that he was doing what he loved doing,”
she said.
Now that the whirlwind has calmed down, Shirley McCormack knows
that the reality of her son’s death will sink in further. But she
also knows she won’t have to face it alone.
Boyles and Novak picked her, her mother, Eleanor Twigg, and
daughter Leslie McCormack up from John Wayne Airport on Monday
morning. They told her that any time she wants, she’s welcome to come
visit their station.
“I thought, ‘That’s going to get me through a lot,’” she said. “I
know when having a day like that, I will call them. I will go there.
I will say, ‘Here I am; help me feel better.’”
* MARISA O’NEIL covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4618 or by e-mail at marisa.oneil @latimes.com.
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