A Doctor Humiliated a Night Nurse. Then Soldiers Asked for Major Carter-eirian

Dr. Marcus Webb threw my paperback novel across the break room like it was trash.

It hit the wall with a flat, ugly slap and fell open across the tile beside the vending machine.

For one second, the whole night-shift lounge at Mercy General stopped breathing.

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The air smelled like bleach, burnt coffee, cold rainwater, and somebody’s reheated noodles from the microwave.

My turkey sandwich sat beside me in foil, still wrapped, because I had been four minutes into a fifteen-minute break when Marcus decided my existence offended him.

“This is a hospital, Carter,” he said, loud enough for the interns to hear. “Not a library.”

He smiled the way some men smile when they are sure the room belongs to them.

“If you want to play nurse and read fairy tales, go home.”

Then he stepped closer and lowered his voice.

“You don’t belong here.”

I looked at my book on the floor.

Then I looked at him.

I said nothing.

That silence was the first thing he misread.

People like Marcus Webb think silence means surrender because surrender is the only kind of quiet they recognize.

But I had learned quiet in places where sound could get people killed.

I had learned it under rotor wash, in canvas operating tents, in rooms where the lights flickered out and nobody stopped working because the man on the table was still bleeding.

At Mercy General, I was Nurse Carter.

At Mercy General, I worked nights, signed charts, changed dressings, caught medication errors, comforted families, and kept my head down.

I had done that for three years, two months, and eleven days.

That was long enough for people to decide they knew me.

Marcus had decided I was ordinary.

Worse, he had decided I was safe to humiliate.

He was twenty-nine, brilliant, handsome, and cruel in the lazy way of men who had always been useful enough to be excused.

He wore expensive shoes under his scrubs and moved through the ER like every hallway had been built for his entrance.

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