Rookie Nurse In Blue Scrubs Faced The Men Who Stormed Her ER-ruby - Chainityai

Rookie Nurse In Blue Scrubs Faced The Men Who Stormed Her ER-ruby

St. Bartholomew Central sounded tired before the violence ever reached its doors, because hospitals have a way of groaning under pressure long before glass breaks.

I had been there three weeks, long enough for people to learn my badge and short enough for them to decide it did not matter.

To most of the emergency department, I was Emily Carter, the new float nurse in blue scrubs, quiet hands, loose ponytail, scar through one eyebrow, and no habit of defending myself when a doctor wanted applause.

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Dr. Calvin Ror wanted applause more than he wanted oxygen in a room, and everybody knew it except the people who kept promoting him.

That afternoon, the man in trauma bay four was sweating through his gown, his skin a wet gray that made the monitor look less like a machine and more like a warning.

I told Ror his rhythm had changed and he needed another EKG, troponin, and a call upstairs before the pain wrote its answer in permanent ink.

Ror took the chart from my hand while two residents watched from behind him, already smiling because cruelty had become part of the teaching schedule.

“When did you become cardiology?” he asked, and the patient looked from him to me with the careful terror of someone who knows pride can be fatal.

I kept my voice low and told him the strips did not match, because I had learned in other rooms that a calm sentence sometimes travels farther than a shout.

Ror stepped closer and told me to learn my place, then sent me to control the waiting room as if frightened families were less important than his authority.

Mara Ellison, the charge nurse, watched me go with the kind of anger nurses save for after the shift, because during the shift there is never enough time for rage.

The waiting room was already full of people trying not to become patients, and three children sat under the intake counter because every chair had been taken.

At 3:36, the first impact hit the glass doors hard enough to make the clerk drop her pen and the old man nearest triage clutch his oxygen tubing.

The second impact cracked the panel from top to bottom, and the third knocked the sliding door loose with a scream of metal that made every head turn.

Six men came through the opening in leather vests and heavy boots, carrying a pipe, a chain, and the absolute confidence of men who had been promised a hospital would not fight back.

The leader entered last, broad and sweating, with tattooed arms and eyes that searched the room the way a blade searches cloth.

“Where is the soldier?” he asked, and the question did not belong in a hospital unless the answer was already bleeding somewhere inside it.

Ror stepped out behind me, but the arrogance had drained from him so quickly it was almost impressive.

I counted before I breathed, because counting had saved me in places where panic got people killed faster than weapons did.

Six attackers, one guard down, two exits blocked by screaming bodies, three children under the desk, one oxygen tank too close to the fight, one fire extinguisher behind the leader, one pair of trauma shears in my pocket.

The leader looked me over, saw the scrubs, the tired face, and the badge clipped straight to my pocket, then smiled as if he had found the weakest thing in the room.

He told me to move, and I stayed between him and the hallway because every helpless person behind me had become my patient.

When he raised the pipe toward the triage clerk, I stepped inside his reach, trapped his wrist, and pressed into the nerve above his elbow until his hand opened.

The pipe dropped, but I caught it before it hit tile, and the room went still around the sound it never got to make.

Another attacker swung a chain too wide, so I put a rolling stool into his shin and let his own weight finish most of the work.

A third grabbed my shoulder, and I redirected him into the counter with enough force to fold him without breaking anything I did not have to break.

Ror stared from the corridor, pale now, because he had mocked many nurses in his career but apparently had never considered one might know how to end a fight.

Mara found her voice first and began moving civilians behind hard cover while I backed toward trauma two, where a man in a torn jacket lay half on the floor.

He had one hand clamped high at his groin and the other locked around a black pouch inside his jacket, and the blood loss was moving faster than a committee could discuss.

The leader saw him at the same time I did and ordered his men to bring him the pouch.

Ror caught my arm when I stepped forward, and I looked at his hand until he understood that touching me again would become its own emergency.

“You are not qualified,” he said, but the soldier on the floor was dying, and death had never once cared about titles.

I told Mara to start lockdown, sent Priya for combat gauze and blood tubing, and dropped to my knees in broken glass beside the wounded courier.

His eyes opened for half a second, clouded with pain and recognition he did not have enough blood pressure to explain.

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