When The Nurse Took Command, The Operating Room Fell Dead Silent-nhu9999 - Chainityai

When The Nurse Took Command, The Operating Room Fell Dead Silent-nhu9999

The first thing Dr. Roland Gallagher noticed was the blood on his shoes.

It had crept under the trauma table and reached the polished leather he wore because he believed even emergency medicine should know who was in charge.

He looked down for half a second.

Image

In that half second, Major Emma Collins saw fear take him by the throat.

The man on the table was Special Agent Henry Bradley, and he was running out of blood faster than any elevator could carry him to a proper surgical suite.

The hospital lights had failed.

The alarm was screaming.

Somewhere beyond the double doors, armed men were moving through a civilian hospital to finish what an ambush had started.

Emma had one hand in the wound and one eye on every person in the room.

“Clamp the lung root,” she told Gallagher.

He stared at her as if the words were in another language.

“Doctor,” she said, sharper now.

His hands moved before his pride could stop them.

That was the first small miracle of the night.

Gallagher stepped back to the table and placed his gloved fingers where she directed, deep enough to feel the pulsing shape of disaster.

He had done impossible things in bright operating rooms with full teams, perfect suction, and music playing softly behind him.

He had never done this under emergency lights while gunfire cracked outside the doors.

Emma saw the moment his training found him.

His shoulders lowered.

His breathing slowed.

“I have pressure,” he said.

“Hold it,” she said.

Agent O’Connor and Agent Davis shoved a steel supply cabinet across the entrance.

The cabinet hit the door with a metallic boom, then jumped as something slammed from the hallway side.

One of the younger nurses covered her mouth.

Emma did not tell her not to cry.

Fear is not weakness when the work keeps going.

That was a lesson Emma had learned in places where the ground shook and the air smelled of dust, fuel, and hot metal.

She had carried that lesson into Chicago under a quiet name and a nurse’s badge.

The badge had been good cover because almost everyone underestimated the person wearing it.

Gallagher had underestimated her most of all.

Now his fingers were the only thing slowing the bleeding in a federal agent’s chest.

Emma reached for the rib spreader.

“Sternal saw,” she said.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *