Hospital Staff Mocked the Float Nurse Until Special Ops Stormed the ER-rosocute

The first time Mercy General called me “just a float nurse,” I smiled and emptied a vomit basin.

Warm whiskey stink crawled into the back of my throat while fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.

The ER smelled like bleach, sweat, stale coffee, and exhaustion.

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A normal Wednesday.

Nancy made sure half the department heard her.

“Don’t touch the central lines, Harper. Leave real nursing to the real nurses.”

She never even looked up from her tablet.

Her silver badge reel flashed beneath the lights every time she shifted her arms.

I stood there holding a basin half full of vomit from a man in Bay 2 who’d mixed cheap whiskey with blood pressure medication.

Behind me, somebody shouted about waiting three hours for food.

A toddler screamed in triage.

Monitors chirped in uneven rhythms down the hallway.

Mercy General sounded alive the way battlefields sounded alive.

Loud.

Chaotic.

One mistake away from disaster.

“You’re floating today,” Nancy continued. “Vitals, cleanups, stocking, transport, lunch coverage. Don’t get creative. Don’t make decisions. Don’t embarrass my department.”

My department.

Nancy loved those words.

She said them like surviving twenty years of double shifts gave her ownership over every hallway and trauma room inside the building.

I nodded once.

“Understood.”

My voice stayed flat.

That irritated her more than anger ever could.

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