The Nurse Who Saluted The John Doe Everyone Else Had Written Off-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Nurse Who Saluted The John Doe Everyone Else Had Written Off-nhu9999

By the eleventh hour of her shift, Abby could tell the time by the ache in her feet.

It was 3:14 in the morning, the hour when people stopped performing pain and started surrendering to it.

The waiting room had gone quiet in the way emergency rooms do before something bad arrives.

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Jenna stood beside her, bright-eyed in white scrubs that had not yet learned what blood did to fabric.

She still carried her stethoscope like it meant something holy.

Abby had carried hers like that once.

Before Saint Jude’s.

Before the double shifts.

Before she learned that if she let every patient into her chest, there would be nothing left of her by winter.

The ambulance bay doors opened with a hiss.

Cold October air rushed in first.

Then came the stretcher.

“Trauma One,” Dr. Gregory Evans called.

He did not look up from the chart he was signing.

Evans was a capable doctor, the kind who could place a tube in a storm, but he spoke to patients like machines with failing parts.

The man on the stretcher looked like a machine that had already been scrapped.

His coat was heavy with mud.

Leaves clung to his beard.

Blood ran from somewhere beneath his hair and disappeared into the gray tangle at his jaw.

His left leg lay at a wrong angle under soaked denim.

“John Doe,” the paramedic said. “Found in a ditch off County Road Nine. Looks like pedestrian versus SUV. No wallet. No phone. Pressure is eighty-five over fifty after fluids.”

Jenna’s face folded.

“Oh, the poor man,” she whispered.

Nobody corrected her.

That was the first disrespect.

Not cruelty.

Not malice.

Just the easy, downward kindness people give to someone they have already decided is beneath them.

Evans snapped on purple gloves and glanced at the monitor.

“He is circling the drain,” he said. “Probable head bleed. Belly is rigid too. Let’s keep him comfortable and move him to CT if he holds pressure.”

The paramedic at the door shook his head.

“Nobody was out there looking for him,” he muttered. “Just a stray.”

Abby set her coffee down.

In an emergency room, language can become a treatment plan.

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