They Mocked The Shaking ICU Nurse Until The ER Doors Burst Open-nga9999 - Chainityai

They Mocked The Shaking ICU Nurse Until The ER Doors Burst Open-nga9999

Morgan Hayes learned the sound of Mercy General before she learned the people.

The ICU had a buzz in the lights that settled behind her eyes and stayed there.

The ventilators clicked on time.

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The pumps chirped when nurses were already busy.

The floor smelled like plastic, bleach, stale coffee, and the little packets of graham crackers families opened when they did not know what else to do with their hands.

Still, Morgan’s hands shook whenever she stood still.

Brenda noticed first.

Brenda noticed everything.

She was the night charge nurse, fifty years old, sharp as a clamp, and proud of being able to smell incompetence through a closed door.

“Hayes,” she said, rolling her computer beside bed four. “You are behind again.”

Morgan kept her eyes on the tablet.

“I’m charting the urine output.”

“You have been charting urine output for six minutes.”

“The system logged me out.”

Brenda looked down at Morgan’s hands.

The fingers hovered over the screen with a fine tremor, not big enough to be dramatic, just steady enough to make people uncomfortable.

“If a tablet does this to you,” Brenda said, “I do not know what you will do in a real code.”

Morgan nodded because nodding was easier than explaining.

Dr. Mitchell walked past with a chart in his hand and confidence on his face.

He had the smooth voice of a man who had never needed to shout over rotor wash.

“Bed two is dropping pressure,” he said. “Push a liter of saline and call me if he dips.”

Morgan glanced at the patient.

He was old, septic, waxy around the mouth.

His feet looked mottled under the blanket.

The monitor told a story the order did not.

Fluids would not fix what was happening to him.

He needed pressors.

He needed someone to look at the whole body, not just the number.

Morgan opened her mouth, then closed it.

Four weeks at Mercy had taught her the chain of command.

It had also taught her that “new nurse” meant “do not embarrass the doctor.”

So she primed the line and hated herself quietly.

Then the red trauma phone rang.

It did not sound like the call lights.

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