The Rookie Nurse He Chose With His Final Breath Changed Everything-Quieen - Chainityai

The Rookie Nurse He Chose With His Final Breath Changed Everything-Quieen

The fluorescent lights in trauma bay four hummed like they had been built to punish tired people.

Chloe Adams stood under them with sweat gathering inside her gloves, trying not to let anyone see her hands shake.

The room smelled like bleach, iodine, old coffee, and something metallic that never fully left the floor no matter how many times housekeeping mopped it.

Image

She had been off orientation for three weeks.

Three weeks was long enough for everyone to expect her to know where everything was.

It was not long enough for her stomach to stop dropping every time the overhead radio cracked alive.

Dr. Richard Hayes stood at the head of the empty bed, threading a suture through practice foam like he was bored by the entire human race.

He had been a trauma surgeon for 30 years.

People said he had hands like machinery.

People also said that like it was a compliment.

“Are you going to stare at the suction canister, Adams, or are you going to empty it?” he asked.

He did not raise his voice.

He never wasted energy that way.

Chloe grabbed the plastic container with a heat of shame crawling up her neck.

“Right. Sorry, Doctor.”

“I don’t need apologies,” Hayes said. “I need anticipation.”

The needle driver hit the metal tray with a crack sharp enough to make her flinch.

“You’ve been off orientation for what? Three weeks?”

“Yes.”

“Then by now you should know that when I ask for 4-0 Vicryl, I want scissors ready in the other hand. You operate a half step behind everyone else. In this room, a half step kills people.”

Chloe stared at the gray linoleum and said the only thing she could say without crying.

“I understand.”

She did not tell him the senior nurse had disappeared to the ambulance ramp for a smoke break.

She did not tell him she had been managing three drips, two families, and a drunk patient trying to rip out his IV all within the last hour.

Chloe had learned quickly that excuses sounded different when they came from a rookie.

They sounded like proof.

At 24, she was still paying for nursing school with money she did not have, still driving a ten-year-old car that made a grinding noise on cold mornings, still telling her mother over the phone that the job was hard but good.

She had wanted to work in emergency medicine because she believed people deserved someone steady on the worst day of their life.

Then she met Hayes, and he made steady look like the absence of feeling.

“You look at them like tragedies,” he said, peeling off his gloves. “They’re broken machines. Fix the machine or get out of the shop.”

Chloe hated him for saying it.

She hated him more because part of her was afraid he might be right.

Then the radio crackled.

“Dispatch to County General. ETA three minutes. Level 1 trauma. Male, unknown age. Multiple gunshot wounds to chest and abdomen. Tachycardic, hypotensive. Tourniquet applied to right thigh. Vitals dropping.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *