I did not move. I did not cry. I looked at Preston, then at the donor turning grey under my gloves, and I said one sentence into the overhead mic clipped to my collar. Command, this is Commander Nora Vale, Navy Trauma, requesting you unlock my credentials in this facility, authorization Vale-Nine-Nine-Charlie. The speakers crackled. A calm voice answered for the whole ER to hear. Credentials confirmed. Dr. Nora Vale, Lieutenant Commander, US Navy Reserve, board-certified trauma surgeon, visiting attending, cleared for full privileges as of oh-six-hundred. The badge on my chest flipped on its lanyard. Not the pink NURSE FLOAT one Preston kept mocking. The black one underneath. Gold trident. MD. Attending. Preston’s father, the Chairman, stepped out from behind the nurses’ station where he had been listening the whole time. He was not smiling. He was recording. I turned back to the donor without blinking. Ten of epi, hang two units O-neg, prep a chest tube on the left, someone page anesthesia, and Dr. Hail, step away from my patient before I have you removed for interfering with a resuscitation. Preston laughed once, high and thin, and reached for the chart like he could still save face. His father’s voice cut across the room, quieter than the monitors. Preston. Hands where she can see them. I opened the chest, found the tear, packed it, and got a rhythm back in ninety seconds. When the donor coughed and asked who saved him, I did not answer. The Chairman did. The nurse your son just fired on international speakerphone. By morning Preston was on administrative leave, the PA recording was on every group chat in the building, and the pink lanyard was in my locker as a souvenir. Nobody Nora, they had called me. Turns out Nobody outranked everyone in the room.
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