They Called The Night Nurse Fragile Until The ER Went Dead Silent-nga9999 - Chainityai

They Called The Night Nurse Fragile Until The ER Went Dead Silent-nga9999

For three years my trauma floor called me the mouse.

They said it when I passed the nurses’ station with my head down.

They said it when my hands shook after a crash cart slammed into a wall.

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They said it when I took the rooms nobody wanted, the drunk restraints, the infected wounds, the families who spit grief at anyone in scrubs.

I let them.

There are worse things than being underestimated.

Being remembered is one of them.

Dr. Harris never looked at me unless he needed someone to blame.

He smelled like peppermint mouthwash and expensive cologne, which was almost funny in a trauma center that usually smelled like bleach, fear, and old coffee.

Chloe looked at me plenty.

She looked at me the way pretty people look at furniture that came with the room.

“Careful, Doctor,” she would say whenever Harris snapped at me. “You’ll make Anna cry again.”

Then she would laugh, and the interns would laugh, and I would keep folding bandages because folding bandages was easier than explaining a nervous system that still heard mortars in dropped meal trays.

They thought I cried because I was weak.

I cried because my body had survived too many alarms.

My mind knew I was in St. Jude Memorial.

My muscles remembered Kandahar.

Five years of my life had been spent behind radios, thermal screens, and aircraft noise, guiding men through places where one wrong word could turn a road into fire.

I knew how to clear a room.

I knew how to read a man’s hands before I trusted his face.

I knew what panic sounded like when it was pretending to be command.

Then I came home and became a nurse because I wanted to save people one at a time, close enough to touch, close enough to know their names.

Healing is not a clean trade.

Sometimes survival gives you skills and takes your peace as payment.

That Tuesday began the way most night shifts begin, with cheap coffee, thin patience, and a man in bed seven who had vomited on his restraints.

He was Chloe’s patient.

Of course he was.

“Anna, go clean him,” she said without looking up from her phone.

I almost told her no.

Then I pulled on purple gloves and went.

The room smelled like stale beer and stomach acid.

The patient snored through it, wrists strapped loosely to the rails for his own safety, split lip shining under the exam light.

A supply cart crashed somewhere down the hall.

I dropped before I thought.

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