She Took The Wrong SUV After Her Shift And Met Him Again At Work-kieutrinh

Bianca Mendes had learned that exhaustion did not always feel like falling apart.

Sometimes it felt like silence.

It felt like standing under the bright hospital lights at three in the morning, hearing a monitor scream behind a curtain, and realizing her hands were already moving before her mind had caught up.

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It felt like smiling at a family member who needed hope, even when hope had stepped out of the room ten minutes ago.

It felt like saying, “You’re okay, I’ve got you,” to someone twice her size while her own back burned from helping lift him.

By the time she walked out of St. Catherine’s Medical Center in Manhattan that night, Bianca was so tired she had forgotten how fear was supposed to feel.

The rain had stopped, but the city was still wet and shining.

Midtown looked polished and mean under the streetlights, all black pavement, yellow headlights, steam from the manholes, and people moving like they still had somewhere important to be.

Bianca did not.

She had been on her feet for twenty-four hours.

There had been two code blues, three families who needed someone to explain what nobody wanted to explain, one little boy crying for his mother after surgery, and one resident who kept missing veins until Bianca quietly took over.

Her shoulders ached.

Her hair had collapsed from a neat bun into a loose knot held together by a bent bobby pin and pure stubbornness.

There was a tiny line of blood under one fingernail she had scrubbed at until the skin around it turned sore.

She pulled her gray coat tighter over her navy scrubs and stepped toward the curb with her phone in her hand.

The rideshare app said: black SUV, south entrance.

There was a black SUV at the curb.

Its rear door was slightly open.

In a normal state of mind, Bianca would have checked the plate, checked the driver’s name, looked up, looked around, asked one question, and waited three more seconds.

But exhaustion is a thief.

It steals the little safety rituals first.

Bianca looked at the black SUV, looked at her phone, and thought, close enough.

She climbed in.

The back seat was warmer than the night air and softer than anything she owned.

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