The Nurse Who Saluted The John Doe Everyone Else Had Written Off-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Nurse Who Saluted The John Doe Everyone Else Had Written Off-nga9999

By the eleventh hour of Abby Carver’s shift, the emergency room had become a tunnel of fluorescent light and small alarms.

Her feet hurt in a way that felt personal.

The memory foam in her shoes had given up sometime after midnight, and now every step sent the hard floor straight into her bones.

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She was leaning against the nurse’s station with coffee that tasted like burnt plastic when the ambulance doors opened.

Cold October air rolled in first.

Then came the gurney.

One wheel squealed with every turn, a thin sound that cut through the monitors and the old smell of bleach.

Luis, one of the paramedics, pushed from the back with his jaw clenched.

Miller steered from the front.

Between them lay a man who looked less like a patient than something the road had discarded.

His coat was soaked through with mud.

Dead leaves clung to his beard.

His left leg was bent in a way that made Jenna, the new nurse, look away.

Dr. Gregory Evans stepped into trauma one without lifting both eyebrows.

He was a good doctor when he decided to be one, but he had trained himself to sound bored because boredom made death feel manageable.

“What do we have?” he asked.

“John Doe,” Luis said. “Found in a ditch off County Road Nine. Looks like hit-and-run. Vitals are bad.”

Abby was already moving.

She took her trauma shears from her pocket and positioned herself at the man’s right side.

Pity was useless in that room.

Pity made your hands slow.

Pity made you look at the face when the bleeding was happening somewhere lower.

So Abby did what she always did.

She locked her feelings behind her ribs and worked.

Jenna hovered near the man’s head, young enough to still think softness could pull someone back.

“Poor thing,” she whispered as she wiped mud from his forehead.

Evans glanced at the monitor and sighed.

“Pressure’s garbage,” he said. “Probably a head bleed, chest trauma, abdomen rigid. Let’s not break our backs on a miracle.”

Abby heard the sentence and kept cutting.

The canvas coat opened under her shears.

The smell changed at once.

The cheap alcohol on the outside of the coat disappeared, and underneath it was only cold rain, dirt, and blood.

She cut through the flannel shirt next.

Bruises covered his chest in purple and red, but old scars sat underneath the new damage like marks on a map.

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