S A V E

A harmonious chorus of machines beeped and whirred softly around Serena as she hunched over that evening’s paperwork.
Despite it being a relatively slow day for her line of work, there was still plenty to get through. Diagnosis reports, assessments, treatment evaluations, test results. Plenty to keep Serena working through the night. Under the guise of giving them all a night off, she had sent the rest of her team to the party on Bovo Yagen.
By all accounts, it was meant to be one to remember. Given the fevered attempts from her team to convince them to join her, Serena was almost sorry she had missed out, but this was her time. When the wing was empty, when overnight patients were tucked safely and soundly in their beds, when the chorus of machines was joined by peaceful silence. It was just how she preferred it.
The datapad clicked happily beneath her fingers, in perfect time to the hospital around her.
Click. Beep. Tap. Click. Beep. Tap. Click. Beep. Ta-…
A sharp, piercing bell cut through the melody mercilessly. Serena winced and cast her gaze hesitantly over to the holoprojector. Please, her voice echoed in her own mind, please don’t be the holoprojector. When she finally found what she was looking for, her stomach dropped. The blinking light doused the entire right side of her desk in a blazing flame red, making the papers scattered across the metal look rather morbid.
Serena let out a silent sigh, stretching the muscles in her back as she withdrew from her paperwork to answer the call. Red fire was quickly replaced with the flickering blue outline of a medic, with a grim expression on his face. “We got a live one, Serena.” The young woman curled her lips up into a smile. “Well that’s good, half my job is done already.” The man had the decency to titter softly at her joke, but he clearly wasn’t in a joking mood.
“Chest laceration.” He continued. “Pretty nasty, we managed to get the bleeding under control but he’s gonna need some serious stitching.” Serena nodded as she slid her chair out from under the desk. “Copy that, see you in five.” The tiny blue replica of the man fizzled into nothing once more, and Serena turned to look disparagingly at the empty ward. As she scrapped her thick curls into a messy bun on top of her head, Serena reminded herself that she ought not to have been surprised.
This was the job. If it didn’t happen right now, it was bound to happen in an hour, or two. She just hoped whoever it was had a dammed interesting story to make up for stealing her night off.
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