The Quiet Nurse Who Faced a Hit Team on St. Jude's Fourth Floor-mdue - Chainityai

The Quiet Nurse Who Faced a Hit Team on St. Jude’s Fourth Floor-mdue

The first sound Amani Rogers heard after the gunshots was not screaming. It was the monitor inside room 420, still counting Ralphy Holmes’s heartbeat as if the world outside the door had not changed.

That was the mercy of machines.

They did not care who betrayed whom.

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They did not flinch when a uniform lied.

They only told the truth in numbers.

Ralphy’s oxygen saturation was falling again. Jessica was trapped beside him, too frightened to move and too brave to leave him. A dead police officer lay near the elevator bank. A fake one was turning toward the trauma-room door with murder in his hand.

Amani let her breath leave slowly.

Not Abby now.

Not the gentle nurse who warmed blankets and called old men sweetheart.

The part of her that had survived places nobody put on maps rose cleanly and without drama. It did not rage. It did not mourn. It measured distance, angles, timing, and bone.

The fake officer passed the supply alcove.

Amani moved.

The oxygen cylinder was small enough to lift and heavy enough to matter. She drove it upward into his pistol wrist. The crack sounded louder than his suppressed gun. His weapon clattered across the floor, spinning once under the red emergency light.

He recovered too quickly for an amateur. His left hand flashed to a knife. He slashed for her throat, close and ugly, the way trained men fight when they expect fear to do half the work.

Amani gave him no fear.

She stepped inside the strike, trapped his arm, and slammed her knee into the side of his leg. The joint folded. His breath punched out. Before he could shout, she drew the scalpel from her pocket and drove it into the narrow space above his vest, low enough to stop him, clean enough to keep the hallway quiet.

She caught him by the back of the jacket and shoved him into the supply closet.

The door clicked shut.

Jessica was staring through the window of room 420, one hand pressed to her mouth.

Amani lifted one finger to her lips.

Then she picked up the fallen pistol.

Fifteen rounds. One magazine. One compromised floor.

The old training returned without asking permission. The fourth floor became a grid in her mind. Freight elevator. Passenger elevator. Eastern stairs. Nurses’ station. Supply closet. Oxygen shutoff panel. Crash cart. Linen room. Room 420 at the end, where Ralphy was bleeding under hospital lights.

The strike team would not retreat because one man went silent.

They would come faster.

Amani stripped the dead infiltrator’s radio and listened. Static breathed in her ear. Then a voice cut through it.

“Point man, status.”

She knew the voice before the second word.

Dominic Mercer.

For three years, she had carried his absence like shrapnel. In Bucharest, Dominic had been assigned overwatch. He had a clean sightline. He had the signal codes. He had been the last man who could have warned them before the ambush closed.

Instead, he vanished.

The government called the mission unsanctioned.

The newspapers never learned the team’s names.

The survivors became rumors.

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