The Nurse Who Woke Up Missing A Kidney And Found A $38,700 Lie-congtien

Hospital light was the first thing Emily Reynolds understood.

Not the room.

Not the bandage.

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Not the voice somewhere beyond the curtain saying her blood pressure had come up.

Just light, bright and flat, pressing through her eyelids until the world turned white.

Then pain moved under her left ribs.

It was not sharp at first.

It was deeper than that, a hot, heavy pull that seemed to fasten itself to her spine every time she tried to breathe.

Emily opened her eyes and smelled bleach, plastic tubing, and lilies.

Pink lilies sat in a vase near the window, already soft at the edges, their perfume too sweet for a recovery room.

A monitor clicked beside her.

Cold air slid from the ceiling vent over her bare arms.

Her throat felt scraped raw, and when she lifted her hand, IV tape tugged against her skin.

She had worked in hospitals for eleven years.

She knew what anesthesia did to a body.

She knew the cotton-mouth confusion, the hard ache of an incision, the slow return of memory in pieces too bright to look at all at once.

She also knew where certain incisions belonged.

Her fingers moved before she was fully ready.

They touched the gauze under her left ribs.

They stopped.

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