Then Senator Ellis crashed. Room 414, 2:47 a.m., massive anterior STEMI, and Dr. Marsh froze. I watched his hands shake over the crash cart like he had never actually run a code without three fellows behind him. The monitor was screaming, the wife was screaming, and Marsh shouted for epi and then shouted for the wrong dose. I stepped forward once. Quietly. I said, push half that, start compressions, I’ve got the airway. He whirled on me, face purple, and hissed, sit down, you glorified babysitter, before I have you fired tonight. That was the moment the double doors banged open and Dr. Halvorsen, the hospital president himself, walked in with the senator’s chief of staff, both of them white as paper. Halvorsen looked straight past Marsh, straight at me, and his voice cracked with relief. Colonel. Thank God you’re on shift. Take it. The room went silent except for the flatline. I stripped off the cardigan that hid my Navy ID badge, the one that read Commander Dr. Elena Reyes, MD, PhD, former chief of trauma cardiology, USNS Comfort, Bronze Star recipient, and I stepped to the head of the bed. Twelve minutes later the senator had a pulse, a rhythm, and a shot at seeing his grandkids. When I finally peeled off my gloves, Marsh was still standing in the corner, mouth open, coffee cup shaking in his hand. Halvorsen turned to him and said, gently, Dr. Marsh, the Colonel has been auditing this unit for the Board for six months. Your resignation is on my desk by seven a.m. I walked out into the hallway where my daughter, seven years old in her pink pajamas, was waiting with my mother, both of them beaming. She threw her arms around my knees and whispered, Mama, you saved somebody again, and for the first time in eleven months, I let myself cry.
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