The Old Doll That Made A Sick Child Tell The Truth About Love-xurixuri

The pediatric wing always sounded different after dark.

During the day, there were carts rattling, parents asking questions, phones ringing at the nurses’ station, and children crying over medicine cups that tasted like metal and fake cherry.

At night, the hallway grew thin and echoing.

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Every beep from a monitor seemed louder.

Every cough traveled under the doors.

The air smelled like hand sanitizer, warmed plastic, and coffee that had been sitting too long on the burner.

Emily Carter had learned not to hate that smell.

After five years as a pediatric nurse, she associated it with hard nights that still sometimes ended well.

She was twenty-eight, with tired eyes, a ponytail that never stayed neat past the first hour of a shift, and a small coffee stain on the sleeve of her navy scrubs.

She worked at a county hospital where the pediatric waiting area had plastic chairs, a toy bin that was always missing pieces, and a small American flag by the reception desk.

The flag was not there to make anyone feel patriotic.

It was just part of the room, like the vending machine that ate quarters and the bulletin board covered in school drawings.

Emily liked the drawings best.

Some kids drew houses.

Some drew pets.

Some drew nurses with triangle bodies and wild hair.

She had one taped inside her locker from a little boy who had once written, Nurse Emily gave me apple juice and did not lie.

That was the highest compliment she had ever received.

She tried not to lie to children.

She softened the truth, but she did not dress it up beyond recognition.

A shot would pinch.

A treatment would feel cold.

A parent might be late, but that did not always mean a parent did not care.

She believed children deserved honesty more than adults usually gave them.

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