When Four Marine Helicopters Landed, the ER Finally Saw Claire-lequyen994videoo - Chainityai

When Four Marine Helicopters Landed, the ER Finally Saw Claire-lequyen994videoo

By six in the evening, the storm had turned St. Gabriel’s ER into a room full of wet shoes, tight voices, and people trying very hard not to look afraid.

Rain battered the ambulance bay doors so hard the glass kept trembling in its frame.

The floor was streaked with dark half-moon prints from paramedic boots.

A paper coffee cup sat beside the nurses’ station, the surface of the coffee quivering every time the doors opened and another gust of cold rain pushed in.

Claire Foster stood at triage with a blood pressure cuff in one hand and a chart tucked under her arm.

Her left leg had been aching since lunch.

She had learned not to limp where Grant Morrison could see it, but pain has a way of telling on you when the weather gets heavy.

Morrison noticed before he noticed anything else.

He stopped beside her, looked at her leg, and only then looked at her face.

“Stay in triage, Foster,” he said. “You’re limping again.”

He said it in the same tone he used for misplaced supplies and late lab reports.

Not angry.

Worse than angry.

Certain.

The clerk behind Claire stopped typing.

A young resident glanced over, then looked away as if the floor had suddenly become urgent.

That was how Morrison ruled St. Gabriel’s.

He did not need to humiliate anyone loudly.

He had trained the room to understand that some people belonged near trauma doors and some people belonged behind desks.

For three years, Claire had accepted that arrangement because it made the days easier to survive.

She took temperatures.

She found blankets.

She held emesis basins and explained discharge papers.

She put stickers on charts and smiled at frightened families when nobody else slowed down long enough to do it.

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