A Nurse Shielded a SEAL’s Dog, Then 200 Men Reached Her Door-Ginny

Blood pooled on the linoleum, a brilliant, terrifying red.

At first, the night staff at San Diego Mercy Hospital did not understand why there was blood in two places.

There was the first trail on the wet concrete outside the emergency department, where rain had turned the courtyard floor slick and silver.

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There was the second trail inside the glass door, where a nurse in torn blue scrubs had tried to keep walking until her knees finally folded under her.

Her name was Diana Jenkins.

She was 32 years old.

She had worked the emergency room long enough to know that panic wastes oxygen, and oxygen matters.

That was why, even with five knife wounds in her body, she kept one hand locked around the collar of a 70-lb Belgian Malinois and used the other to point at the dog instead of herself.

“Check him,” she said.

The dog was Titan.

He was not hers.

He belonged to Ryan Corrington, a Navy SEAL veteran who was, at that same moment, fighting for his life in trauma bay two.

Twenty-four hours later, 200 Navy SEALs would walk through the hospital doors because of what Diana did in that courtyard.

But at 11:15 p.m. on that rainy Tuesday night in November, nobody knew any of that yet.

San Diego Mercy sat a few miles from the Pacific, close enough that the wind sometimes carried salt all the way to the ambulance entrance.

The emergency room had the smell every ER has after midnight, a mixture of bleach, old coffee, wet jackets, rubber gloves, and fear people were trying not to show.

Diana knew every inch of it.

She knew which stretcher wheel squeaked.

She knew which monitor alarm meant trouble and which one meant a sticker had come loose.

She knew the difference between a patient who was loud because he was scared and a patient who was quiet because his body had started losing.

That night, the quiet came first.

The waiting room had a man with a sprained wrist, a child with a fever, an elderly woman wrapped in a gray blanket, and three nurses who had all looked at each other too many times.

Experienced ER staff never trusted a calm shift.

At 11:15 p.m., the sliding glass doors opened so violently that the intake clerk dropped her pen.

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