With a flourish,
Jenessa signed her name to the nurses’ notes on a fourth chart. She picked up a stack of papers and the brown
bag containing the lunch she hadn’t had time to eat. All day, the pace in the Intensive Care unit
had been hectic. Two Codes. Three admissions in five minutes, all of them
critical. Instead of twenty-seven, she
felt more like seventy.
She waved at the night nurse. “See you tomorrow.”
“That’s two extras in a row,” one of the women called. “Are you some kind of glutton?”
Am I, she wondered. She straight-armed the door and headed for
the stairs. One more thing and I’m out
of here. She stopped on two other units
to collect protest forms and entered the stairwell.
Voices, eerie and distorted drifted
from below. The echo-effect made her
wonder if the speakers were male or female.
“Don’t worry, if we just push them a little harder, they’ll walk.”
“You’re right. Who could resist --”
Who were they talking about, she
wondered. She leaned over the railing,
but shadows hid the speakers. The voices
faded. A door slammed. She frowned and headed to the fifth floor
where she entered the Nursing Office.
Lorraine Rodgers, one of the evening
supervisors, looked up. “Again? Don’t you get tired of making waves?”
“Is that what I do? I thought I was fulfilling my role as a good
union member and a conscientious nurse.
The contract gives us the right to protest unsafe working
conditions. I just make sure they’re
collected.”
The middle-aged woman shook her
head. “We all know this is your personal
crusade. Can’t you put the past to
rest?”
Jenessa’s hands clenched and she
felt the muscles in her shoulders tighten.
“Could you?” She fought a barrage
of memories. “See that Ms. Wallace gets
these. Not that she cares.”
“You could give them to her. She’s in the house. The Board’s meeting to select the new
Director and we all know who that will be.”
“Maybe they’ll choose someone else.”
Mrs. Rodgers laughed. “Do you really believe that. She’s been angling for the job since she
arrived. We’ll have to learn to live
with her.”
“Maybe.”
“Another petition asking for
Sandra’s removal?”
Jenessa shrugged. “See you tomorrow.”
“You’re on again? Do you work all these extra shifts just to
log complaints?”
“If I don’t, who’d be here for the
patients?” Jenessa strode away.
Fifteen minutes later, in her
apartment across the street, she stood in the shower. Hot water uncoiled her tight muscles, but not
her thoughts. Would the hospital Board
really name Sandra Wallace, a woman disliked by most of the nurses as the new
director? With Jim Bishop as Board
president, the choice seemed likely.
After pulling on an over-sized blue
tee shirt, she headed to the kitchen and zapped the spicy chicken dish she
should have eaten for lunch. Though she considered working on her Master’s
thesis, she felt too tired to read the stack of articles on the desk.
The apartment door slammed. She looked up and saw her roommate. Megan kicked off her shoes. “Are you ready for a bomb? Guess what the Board has done.”
“Sandra.”
“Is out.” Megan grinned. “Josh and I were at the Cove for dinner. Sam introduced Eric Bradshaw. Would you believe he’s the new Director of
Nursing? And what a hunk he is.”
Jenessa pushed back long strands of
dark brown hair that had come loose from her braid. “You’re kidding.”
“Not one bit.”
“It’s a ploy. Can’t you hear Mr. Bishop’s laughter? Let’s give the girls a man to drool
over. That’ll shut them up.”
“Come on, Jen. At least they didn’t name Her.” Megan headed across the living room
discarding pieces of clothes as she walked.
“He’s every woman’s dream. Tall,
blond, broad shoulders. I positively
drooled. He’s got the greatest
dimples. That’s because he’s a Libra.”
Trust Megan to ask his sun sign,
Jenessa thought. Her roommate’s
description confirmed her suspicions of the Board’s motives. “Sounds like you’re adding him to your
string.”
“Wrong. A Libra and a Pisces. Odd couple material.” Megan’s blonde curls bounced with the force
of her denial. “He’s for you, my Aries
friend. Remember what I always say. An opposition can be exciting.”
Not again, Jenessa thought. For the past year, Megan’s attempts at
matchmaking seemed designed to drive her crazy.
“Megan, no.”
“You can’t be alone forever.”
“You’re surviving.”
“Alone I’m not. My problem is too many and being unable to
hurt anyone.” She shrugged. “Give it a shot.”
Jenessa frowned. Megan and she had been friends since they
were five, but there were things she couldn’t tell her. Things about Chuck and the marriage.
“I’m union. He’s management. Can you see me falling for someone from the
opposition?”
“And what will you be when you finish
your Master’s?”
“Not here. I’ll work for a doctor. Head to the city. Become a consultant.” She followed the trail of clothes and
gathered them as she walked. “With my
reputation here, they won’t promote me.”
“Your reputation is undeserved. Just because you organized the union, sent a
petition to recall Sandra, started the protest forms, negotiated the contract
--” The click of the bathroom door cut
off Megan’s words.
Jenessa dropped the clothes beside
the door. She entered the bedroom and stared
at the red brick building across the street where she worked in ICU. She liked Eastlake Community. For nearly three years, the hospital had been
her refuge. She didn’t want to leave.
She returned to the hall just as
Megan emerged rapped in a blue bath sheet that nearly reached her toes.
“...use someone who plunges to the
center of a problem and won’t give up until the next one appears. You are kind of blunt though. He’ll weigh his decisions. Libras do.
What’s on the agenda now?” She
stumbled over the heap of clothes. “I
know. In the hamper.”
“The contract. Monday, I’ll demand a meeting.”
“Why not give Eric Bradshaw a chance
to settle in?”
“Why? They said they’d talk once they hired a new
director and they have.” Jenessa headed
to the kitchen.
“Let him size things first.”
“Do you really think a new D.O.N.
will help us.” Jenessa paused at the end of the hall. “Do you know how many extras I’ve worked this
summer?”
“That’s your punishment for
demanding thirteen hour shifts. They can’t
ask me to work seven days a week.”
“How many doubles have you pulled
since Sandra took over staffing?
Sometimes I think she wants to drive nurses away.”
“Why would she do that?” Megan followed Jenessa into the kitchen. Her knee length yellow tee shirt was the same
bright color as the walls.
“Who knows?”
“Jen, give the guy a chance. How would you like to be in his shoes?”
She laughed. “I’d love it.
You know, if I could transfer my credits, I’d be out of here.”
“It’s the same everywhere. Don’t you pay attention to the letters from
the gang?”
“There are hospitals where the
problems are addressed.” Jenessa picked
up a fork. “Around here no one admits
there are any.”
“I’m not sure there are
answers. The health care system is in
flux.”
“If the Board would sit down with
us, we could try.”
Megan grinned. “Do I see you sword in hand leading the
charge?”
“Don’t make fun. This is serious.”
“I’m sorry. I know how important adequate staffing is to
you.”
“I’ll do whatever it takes to get a
decent contract.” Jenessa bit her lower
lip and fought a storm of memories and guilt.
Megan opened the refrigerator and
poured a glass of juice. “Letters from
the gang are in. Did you do yours?”
“What do you think?” The idea of a monthly exchange of letters
between the members of their clinical group from the nursing program at
Grantley had been Megan’s idea.
“When are you going to write it?”
“How about after the softball game
Saturday?”
“I’m mailing copies tomorrow.” Megan raised her hand in a gesture of
surrender. “I’ll write yours...About the
game. Will we win?”
“We’d better. Softball is the one place where Nursing
stands a chance against the other departments who with one whimper get
everything they want.”
“He’ll be there.”
“Who?”
“Eric Bradshaw.” Megan left the kitchen. “Night.”
As Jenessa loaded the dishwasher, a
slow grin built
from deep
inside. He’d be there. So would Jim Bishop and Sandra Wallace. The annual hospital picnic might be an
interesting event.
2 comments:
Sounds exciting. Is this a part of your Zodiac series?
Yes and no. This was one written when I was aiming for Harlequin. There would have been twelve heroines. Each with a story but I only did three of them and knew Harlequin wasn't for me. The new series is all Cancer heroines and the heros are different signs. Easier to do .
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