Donor Humiliated A Nurse, Then Her Brother Entered The Cafeteria-vivian

Iris Callahan did not stop for coffee because she had time.

She stopped because she had been awake for nineteen hours, and the last patient she lost had left behind a folded crossword on the bedside table.

That morning, the crossword stayed folded.

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His daughter held his hand when his breathing changed, and Iris stood in the doorway longer than she should have after the monitor went quiet.

They train you to chart, clean, call, comfort, and move.

So Iris moved.

She changed gloves, helped another nurse turn a patient, answered a resident’s question, and found herself in St. Luke’s cafeteria staring at a menu board she was too tired to read.

Her hair had come loose from its bun.

Her badge hung crooked from a blue lanyard.

There was a brown coffee stain on her left sleeve from sometime around dawn, when another nurse had bumped her elbow during a code.

Rosa was working the counter.

She saw Iris and softened immediately.

“Large coffee, no room?” she asked.

Iris nodded.

“You need food too,” Rosa said.

“Coffee first,” Iris answered.

Rosa wrote Iris’s name on a cup and started the machine.

That was when Garrett Holloway walked into the cafeteria.

He did not enter like a visitor.

He entered like a man checking whether a room understood who owned the air.

Two men in suits trailed behind him, one carrying a tablet, the other already half turned toward whatever meeting they were late for.

He walked past the line and put one elbow on the counter.

“Three Americanos and a sparkling water,” he said.

Rosa’s hand paused on Iris’s cup.

“Sir, I’m just finishing this nurse’s order.”

Holloway smiled without looking at Iris.

“I’m in a board meeting in four minutes.”

He said it softly, which somehow made it worse.

“She was helping me first,” Iris said.

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