James H. Summers - Psychological Horror Fiction Writer
First Responder Behind The Book

First Responder Behind The Book

Dr. Stevens arrives first to feed, the true First Responder. Karen arrives a step behind, her aid is no longer necessary…

First Responder — Behind the Book

First Responder cover

Photos, fragments, and field notes from the world that became the story.

First Responder started with one simple, wrong question: what if the first person to reach you after a crash wasn’t there to save you? Somewhere between Malibu Creek and Topanga State Park, on a stretch of highway locals call the “Mulholland Dieway,” an unexpected siren at night turned into a thought experiment: a nocturnal psychologist who monitors 911 calls, arrives before the ambulance, and feeds on the dying under the mask of mercy.

From that thought came Dr. Stevens, Karen, Amalie, and the quiet war that unfolds under cheap diner lights and emergency strobes.

I wrote this book to live between horror and honesty—where EMS grind, trauma, and predator logic collide. These pages are where the real locations, late-night drives, firehouses, and diners bled into the world of First Responder.

Excerpt — First To Fall
Cindy never made it home from the party. One wrong turn sent her car into the guardrail on a blind curve locals called Mulholland Dieway. By the time the radios lit up, someone else was already there—calm, professional, and entirely wrong. He spoke to her like a therapist easing a panic attack, right up until he fed and laid her body back where the EMTs would find it. On the report, it read like an accident. For Dr. Stevens, it was just another controlled meal.

Excerpt — The Diner
The Waffle House never closed, not really. Coffee, cigarettes, sugar, and exhaustion kept the doors turning. Dr. Stevens sat beneath the round globe lights like a man between patients, listening to heartbeats and watching for weakness. When Linda shuffled past with a bandaged wrist and a forced smile, he smelled burnt skin and fresh blood beneath the perfume. She thought she was serving a customer. He knew he was studying a future crime scene.

Excerpt — Three-Day Silence
Karen remembers flashes: tile, chains, the smell of soup and bleach from the noodle shop above. Amalie never raised her voice. She didn’t have to. Three days of controlled light, touch, and deprivation rewired Karen’s instincts, turning an EMT into something that moved when called, obeyed when summoned, and carried the night home inside her veins.

In First Responder, mercy is a costume and rescue is just another word for control. The lights look like salvation. The teeth arrive first.
From FIRST RESPONDER

Visual Strip — First Responder World

Some random conceptual frames from the world of First Responder—Mulholland Dieway, firehouses, diners, basements, and the places where the hierarchy watches from just off-camera.

Crash scene on a mountain road at night

Mulholland Dieway: red and blue lights warped by fog and twisted steel – almost nightly.
Ambulance bay behind a city firehouse

Karen’s second home: the firehouse bay, where sleep is optional and calls are not. Time to use the restroom…
Emergency radio scanner glowing in the dark

Dr. Stevens’ favorite sound: a scanner glow and a voice calling for help.
Neon diner sign over empty parking lot

Cindy receives help from a stranger who doesn’t look like a first responder…
Small church interior in flickering candlelight

St. Michael’s before the fire: confession, rot, and unasked questions. Where is Father Wayne?
Concrete tunnel or sewer with ankle-deep water

A city falling into darkness, revealing the sickly yellow glow of an all-hours meeting place for the living and the dead alike.
Shadowed cave entrance in rocky hillside

One of Stevens’ daylight holes: a cave that smells like ash and old decisions.
Laptop and monitors showing multiple camera feeds

Karen fractures, seeing herself as victim, prey, predator, a woman… a monster…
A message left for him...

Dr. Stevens goes to feed on a mundane 911 call and finds that this time, he’s not the first responder. On the body, a message for him.
Laptop and monitors showing multiple camera feeds

Linda’s archive: screens full of Stevens in motion, stillness, and denial. Her dreams, her desires — Linda wonders who’s watching tonight.
Body bag on a gurney in a dim hallway

The corridor where Karen awakes inside a zipped bag-but is it truly awake?
Mustang front end under harsh streetlight

The Mustang under which Amalie bleeds and laughs through the pain. ‘It’s only temporary’, she tells herself.
Meet the cast of First Responder

Dr. Stevens DEAD CENTER – Amalie and Chretien on his right. Linda, Father Wayne, and Karen on his left.

First Responder — Book Snapshot

Why Read First Responder?

Because it treats monsters like case studies and victims like people you might actually know. First Responder is a psychological-horror thriller where a nocturnal psychologist feeds on the dying, an EMT fights to keep her humanity, and an ancient hierarchy watches from the dark. If you like horror built on trauma, power, and intimacy instead of jump-scares, this is where the series starts sharpening its teeth.

Description

By night, Dr. Stevens walks the line between healer and predator. An eating-disorder psychologist who works only the night shift, he hides his true nature behind calm professionalism and clinical empathy. When emergency calls echo across the city, he arrives before the sirens—not to save lives, but to feed on the dying with surgical precision.

His careful world begins to unravel when he crosses paths with Karen, an EMT whose compassion masks her own fractures. Their connection—part fascination, part fatal attraction—pulls them into a spiral of hunger, secrecy, and exposure. As two ancient figures, Amalie and Chretien, resurface to reclaim him and reshape the hierarchy, the illusion of control collapses, and mercy becomes just another form of appetite.

First Responder is about guilt, hunger, and the quiet disasters that happen after midnight—under fluorescent lights, church arches, sewer ceilings, and the glow of a thousand anonymous screens.

Teaser

Between Malibu Creek and Topanga State Park lies a lonely stretch of highway the locals call “Mulholland Dieway.” Here, red lights reflect off twisted steel, and sirens scream for the living. For years, Karen, an EMT hardened by experience, believed this road was cursed. Tonight, she’ll find out why.

In the shadows nearby, something older than mercy waits. It moves through time unnoticed, wearing human faces, answering cries for help long before the sirens arrive. It saves lives—sometimes. Other nights, it simply feeds. What looks like compassion is ritual. What feels like rescue is hunger wearing a mask.

Excerpts — Curated Moments

  • The Whambulance: Karen’s firehouse hums like a machine—steel, sweat, and sleeplessness. The quiet moments between alarms are worse; that’s when the nightmares breathe. A private confrontation in a restroom turns into a fight for survival, and Karen realizes her worst wounds aren’t always on scene.
  • The Diner: Under round globe lights at a late-night Waffle House, Dr. Stevens listens more than he speaks. Linda, a waitress with a bandaged wrist and a camera habit, thinks she’s flirting with a mysterious regular. In reality, she’s documenting the very monster she should run from.
  • The Trap: Karen’s allies plan a fiery wreck on Mulholland meant to draw the vampire out. When Amalie and Chretien arrive, it becomes clear every side has misread the rules. Hunters become bait. Loyalties burn. The only constant is who leaves the road alive.
  • The Fight: In a locked restroom, violence and survival blur. Karen’s instincts finally return in full: every strike is fear leaving the body; every bruise is proof she’s still here. The city keeps moving outside while two possible monsters collide under buzzing fluorescent light.

Themes & Triggers (Reader Advisory)

  • Obsession, stalking, and voyeurism
  • Violent encounters, gore, and survival situations
  • Medical and emergency-response trauma
  • Law-enforcement and religious corruption
  • Emotional manipulation, coercion, and loss of autonomy
  • Dark humor threaded through rising dread

Fun Facts

  • The seed for First Responder hit during a California trip—one late-night siren and a stretch of road that felt wrong. The “Mulholland Dieway” sequence grew directly from that drive.
  • Major locations—mountain highways, small churches, diners, and firehouses—are built from real places visited, photographed, and walked, then bent just enough to make room for vampires.
  • In the wider universe, the events of Site 123 brush up against this book: Dr. Stevens runs those woods at night and notices all the wrong people for all the wrong reasons.
  • Published: February 21, 2017. It’s the first movement in a larger trilogy that continues in Second Chances.

Some Early Reactions

  • “The story line is really intriguing; I just love it.” — Jay S.
  • “As an EMT I am a holder of hands, a consoler of families, a patient advocate, a fixer of the broken. We work long tireless shifts, having no personal life—and it’s all worth it. ‘No greater love has he…’” — Karen T.
  • “Karen’s journey is filled with suspense that immediately captivated me and pulled me in from the first pages.” — Fran S.

Loose Threads & Survivor Voices

Book One doesn’t tie everything off on purpose. Four beings walk out of the season alive—Karen, Thomas, Amalie, and Linda’s lingering digital shadow. Their private journals and logs (collected in the Second Chances bible) bridge the gap between survival and intention, tracing how victims, predators, and voyeurs all carry their own versions of the truth into Book Two.

Have thoughts, questions, or lingering “why did you do that?” reactions? Find me on social media and tell me which scene stuck with you—no spoilers in public threads, please.

This page lives halfway between series bible and autopsy report. First Responder is both: the real work of sirens and shifts, and the haunted version that now exists on the page.
Questions Remain