The night shift at the city hospital’s emergency room settled into its usual rhythm: monitors softly beeping, tired nurses exchanging updates, doctors moving swiftly through cases.
It was close to midnight when the doors suddenly burst open, breaking the pattern.
A bloodied military dog, a German Shepherd wearing a worn harness, pushed its way inside.
Clutched gently in its jaws was a small, barely conscious child.
The receptionist’s voice cracked out sharply, “Sir, you can’t bring animals in here!”
The ER fell silent, all eyes turning toward the unexpected intruder and the child it carried.
The dog’s wrist held a makeshift band of fabric with a cryptic number written on it.
It was a detail that didn’t fit, making the air thick with unease.
I was the ER nurse who first noticed the strange fabric on the dog’s wrist.
Usually, my nights are a monotonous cycle of triage, charting, and navigating hospital politics.
