I've seen some grisly scenes on the interstate here. Once, after crash between a car and a motorcycle, the motorcycle driver was sprawled, face-down and motionless, on the pavement. He was surrounded by five or six people waiting for emergency personnel to arrive. Never found out if he survived, but it didn't look good.
And recently, I was driving home at night and saw a car pulled over on the shoulder, on fire. But the flames weren't coming from under the hood -- they were coming from the passenger compartment, as if someone poured gasoline on the interior and put a match to it. Nobody else -- cops, firefighters, other cars -- was around. Anyone inside wouldn't have survived. Called 911 and gave the location, and was told someone already was on the way.
And recently, I was driving home at night and saw a car pulled over on the shoulder, on fire. But the flames weren't coming from under the hood -- they were coming from the passenger compartment, as if someone poured gasoline on the interior and put a match to it. Nobody else -- cops, firefighters, other cars -- was around. Anyone inside wouldn't have survived. Called 911 and gave the location, and was told someone already was on the way.