A Pregnant Wife Reached the ER, Then One Call Shook Chicago-mdue - Chainityai

A Pregnant Wife Reached the ER, Then One Call Shook Chicago-mdue

The storm hit Chicago just before midnight, hard enough to make the city look guilty.

Rain ran down the glass walls of St. Jude’s Medical Center in silver sheets.

The ambulance bay lights blurred through the water.

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Inside the emergency room, the air smelled like antiseptic, stale coffee, damp coats, and fear people were trying not to show.

A security guard sat near the entrance with a paper cup in his hand.

A mother in a Cubs hoodie filled out an intake form for her coughing son.

A janitor pushed a mop across the same stretch of tile again and again because hospital floors never stayed clean for long.

At 11:42 p.m., the automatic doors opened.

I stepped inside barefoot.

The room went quiet in a way that felt physical.

My white coat clung to me from the rain.

My hair was wet against my face.

One hand pressed against my stomach.

The other reached toward the triage desk, but my fingers kept sliding because there was blood on them.

I remember the tiny American flag beside the desk computer fluttering when the doors opened behind me.

I remember the smell of wet pavement coming in with the storm.

I remember thinking the floor looked too polished for what I was about to leave on it.

Then I took another step.

A red footprint appeared on the tile.

Then another.

The woman in the Cubs hoodie dropped her pen.

The security guard stood.

The receptionist stared at my stomach as if her mind could not decide what she was seeing.

“Help,” I whispered.

The word barely made it out.

A nurse named Sarah Jenkins came around the desk so fast her sneakers squeaked.

She was in blue scrubs, with a coffee stain on one collar and a face that changed the second she reached me.

Not shock.

Training.

“Trauma One!” she shouted. “Now. Get me a gurney.”

I tried to tell her something else.

I tried to say my baby.

I tried to say don’t call him first.

But my knees folded before my mouth could obey me.

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