The Night Soldiers Came For A Nurse An ER Doctor Had Humiliated-ruby - Chainityai

The Night Soldiers Came For A Nurse An ER Doctor Had Humiliated-ruby

My name is Emily Carter.

For three years, that was all I allowed anyone at Mercy General Hospital to know.

Not the rank.

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Not the places I had been.

Not the names of the men whose blood had dried under my fingernails in rooms that shook from explosions.

At Mercy General, I was a night nurse.

I worked when the city outside turned cold and tired, when the ER filled with car wrecks, panic attacks, fevers, overdoses, and mothers holding children wrapped in coats they had thrown on too fast.

I knew which vending machine ate quarters.

I knew which family restroom lock stuck after midnight.

I knew how to find an IV in a dehydrated patient when three other people had already missed.

That was enough.

Being invisible had become a kind of shelter.

At 11:47 p.m. on a November night in Chicago, I sat alone in the corner of the staff break room with a turkey sandwich, a paper cup of bitter coffee, and a mystery novel I had bought for fifty cents at a church sale.

The coffee maker clicked like it was angry at being alive.

The vending machine hummed against the wall.

Outside the door, monitors chirped, phones rang, and somebody near reception was crying in the exhausted way people cry when they have been waiting too long for answers.

The book in my hands was old enough to smell like dust and cardboard.

I liked that about it.

Old paper does not ask who you used to be.

Then Dr. Ethan Webb walked in.

Everyone noticed.

They always did.

He was the kind of doctor administrators bragged about at meetings and nurses warned each other about in private.

Young.

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