A VA Nurse, A Refused IV, And The Tattoo That Froze A Marine-Tep

The first thing I heard from Room 714 was metal hitting drywall.

Not a little clatter, and not the harmless sound of something dropped by accident.

It was the kind of crash that makes an entire hospital hallway pause.

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A stainless-steel medication tray bounced off the beige wall, smacked the tile, and sent two saline flushes skidding under the bed like even they wanted distance from the man in that room.

The smell followed a second later.

Antiseptic, burnt coffee from the nurses’ lounge, and oatmeal cooling on a wall where oatmeal was not supposed to be.

Then the voice came.

“Send me somebody competent!”

Every nurse on Ward 7C knew that voice by the end of the morning.

It had the hard edge of command, the kind of tone that made people straighten before they even decided whether the man deserved it.

I looked up from the chart I was signing.

Brenda came around the corner with oatmeal on her scrubs and a face so tired it looked carved into her.

“He threw breakfast at me,” she said.

I capped my pen.

“Did he hit you?”

“No. The wall got most of it.”

“That was generous of the wall.”

She did not laugh.

That told me more than the oatmeal did.

Behind her, Dr. Harrison stood with a file open in one hand and his other hand pinching the bridge of his nose.

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