The Limping ER Nurse the Marines Still Called Angel Six in the Storm-olweny - Chainityai

The Limping ER Nurse the Marines Still Called Angel Six in the Storm-olweny

By six that evening, St. Gabriel’s ER was already losing the fight against the storm.

Rain hammered the ambulance bay doors until the glass trembled in its frame.

Wet boot prints tracked across the tile from triage to registration and back again.

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The whole room smelled like soaked jackets, sanitizer, coffee gone bitter in paper cups, and the kind of fear that makes people speak too softly.

Claire Foster stood at the triage counter with a blood pressure cuff in one hand and a stack of intake forms under her elbow.

Her left leg ached before the night even started.

That happened when the weather shifted.

It happened when she had been on her feet too long.

It happened when the bone remembered what the mind tried to bury.

Dr. Grant Morrison stopped beside her without greeting her.

He looked at her leg first.

Then he looked at her name badge.

“Stay in triage, Foster,” he said. “You’re limping again.”

The clerk behind Claire stopped typing for half a second.

A resident near the medication room looked over, then looked away.

That was how Morrison controlled a room.

He did not have to yell.

He only had to speak in a tone that made everyone understand whose career could be inconvenienced if they disagreed with him.

Claire nodded.

There were a dozen things she could have said.

She could have told him that pain was not incompetence.

She could have told him that steady hands did not require a perfect gait.

She could have told him that the metal in her leg had been put there by surgeons who had worked twelve hours after an aircraft went down in a place Morrison only knew from old headlines.

Instead, she adjusted the cuff in her hand and took the next patient’s chart.

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