Night on the Edge

23November2025 Night Shift, Ward12, St.Marys Hospital, Manchester

I slipped my darkblue jacket into the narrow locker, clicked the latch shut and inhaled the familiar mix of cheap laundry powder and bleach drifting from the adjoining washroom. Our shift officially began at nine, but I arrived a little early to change without rush and to sip a steaming mug of strong black tea from my thermos. The bitter aftertaste told me the night would be a long one. I smoothed my white shirt under the scrub top, tucked a pair of rubber gloves into my pocket, and stepped into the corridor of the highdependency unit.

The hallway was bathed in the dim glow of fluorescent tubes, echoing with the soft clatter of a cleaning trolley. Beyond the long window, lateautumn darkness lay over the courtyard; a few streetlamps threw a pale light onto a crust of frozen snow. I nodded to the dayshift nurse, who handed me the patient list, the oncall anaesthetists contact details, and an oldfashioned pager. Three patients were under my watch tonight, all critical: check blood pressures, monitor drips, listen to lungs and, above all, keep everyone stable.

In Bed6 lay Albert Gray, 78, diagnosed with terminal stomach cancer. His face was waxy, his opioid pump humming quietly. The monitor showed a fragile pulse, oxygen saturation hovering around 84%. I moistened his lips, adjusted his pillow, and verified the timing of his next morphine dosepain must stay under control even through the night. His breaths softened a touch, though a harsh wheeze still rattled between his ribs.

A door down, the cardiac monitor flickered over a younger manLiam Hart, 25brought in after a roadtraffic collision. He suffered a pelvic fracture, a bruised lung and internal fixation. A catheter was linked to a drainage bag, colloids stood on the bedside table. I checked that his urine container wasnt full and heard him whisper:

How long have I been here?

Two days now. Everythings proceeding as plannedjust keep breathing calmly, I replied evenly. He closed his eyes, and I moved on to the next bedside.

Mabel Dawson, 43, had just survived a suicide attempt involving an overdose of sleeping pills. Her stomach was washed out, her mind cloudy, fresh pink bruises marking her wrists. She writhed under the blanket, trying to pull it off.

Mabel, Im right here. Your mouth may feel dry; lets dampen your lips, I said, offering a cotton ball soaked in water. Her glassy stare fixed on the ceiling, a silent question of how much pain could drive someone to that point.

It was 23:15. I recorded temperature, blood pressure, drip rate. From Alberts room a growing cough drifted out. I raised his head, connected an aspirator and slipped on a pair of oxygen glasses. The wheeze eased, yet his fingers stayed cold and a bluish hue lingered.

Before I could step away, Liams monitor screamed: saturation down to 79, blood pressure falling. He had rolled onto his side and kinked the oxygen tubing; the drain line was tugged, leaving a dark stain on the sheet. I repositioned him, pressed gauze onto the leak, replaced the solution bottle and entered new parameters. The ward was a blur of alarms and hurried hands.

Midnight found me finishing Mabels chart. Two children, a divorce in August, no previous attempts. She asked to use the bathroom, then quietly wept. I helped her, administered diazepam, dimmed the lights. The deep part of the shift beganthoughts stretched thin, my legs felt like lead.

At 01:00 the radiators emitted a thin metallic hum, frost gathering on the window frame. I cycled through elderlypatient, trauma, suiciderisk once more: changed urine containers, lubricated lips, checked drug doses. The oncall doctor dropped by briefly, glanced at the graphs, then climbed back upstairsstroke ward on the next floor. The ward lived on the green lines of the monitors and a second sip of cooling tea.

03:42. Simultaneously, Mabels rasping cry, a VTAC alarm for Liam, and Alberts long moan cut through the air. I slammed the emergency call button, the pager buzzed to life. Time narrowed to a thin slit that demanded three lives be squeezed through at once.

Rushing to Liam, I saw his pulse at 140, blood pressure collapsing. Defibrillation was a last resort; I opted for medication first. A cabinet door slammed in the corridorMabel had pulled out her IV line. Alberts wheeze grew fainter. I hit the red alarm, flooding the ward with a warning light, and, clutching the keycard to the drug cupboard, realised there was no turning back to calm.

The red flare still blinked when two members of the resuscitation teaman anaesthetist and a paramedic with a crashcartburst onto the scene. I briefed them quickly and followed them to Liam, already drawing a dopamine ampoule.

Inside, the monitor danced red and green, but the rhythm held. While the paramedic placed a second catheter, I pressed gauze onto the leak and handed the doctor a syringe. Onefifty on forty, I reported. A minute later the waveforms straightened. The boy would pull through.

The pager vibrated again: the cleaner couldnt manage Mabel. I handed the observation to the paramedic and hurried to the third bed. Mabel stood barefoot by the window, hands clenched around a bottle of saline.

Mabel, look at me. Youre safe here, no one will judge you, I said, approaching slowly. The plastic bottle slipped onto the linoleum; she broke down in tears. I helped her lie down, applied fresh soft dressings, gave a minimal dose of diazepam and rang the oncall psychiatrist: an inperson review in the morning and constant monitoring thereafter.

Only then did I return to Albert. His wheeze deepened, saturation fell to 63. The morphine was still working, but the furrow between his brows spoke of lingering pain. I gave a bolus, perched on a stool, and took his cold hand in mine. The wards siren had faded to a whisper of commands, and an almost eerie quiet settled. Albert drew two shaky breaths, then was still. Time of death: 04:05. I turned off the oxygen, pulled the sheet up over his chin.

The paramedic entered, helped switch off the machines, and left to complete the paperwork. Patient stabilised, patient maintained, patient passed without a scream, I thought, summarising the night in my mind.

Just before five, pale dawn tinged the sky blue through the grimy windows. I collected used gloves, rinsed Liams drain, changed the bloodstained sheet. He breathed more evenly.

Stable. Well get a chest Xray in the morning and, if all is well, move him to the general ward, I told the nurse, and he gave a faint nod.

Mabels breathing levelled. I placed a folding stool beside her bedthe nightshift attendant would keep watch. In her chart I noted: High risk of repeated selfharm; 24hour observation; psychiatric consult; safety plan active.

07:30. The oncall doctor descended again, this time without hurry. I handed over the oral report and the procedure log. He checked the deathtime entry, nodded, and signed the forms.

At 08:00 the dayshift nurse and the ward clerk arrived. I showed them the fresh bandages on Liam, the analgesic schedule, and the observation protocol for Mabel. Together we cleared Alberts room, closed his eyes and prepared his body for transport.

The computer entries trembled under my fingers: Mabel Dawsonalert, denies suicidal ideation; Liam Harthemodynamics stabilised; Albert Graydeceased, pain controlled. I added, Nursing surveillance fully maintained, and clicked Save.

Back in the locker room the same detergent smell lingered, now mixed with the low murmur of earlymorning chatter. I slipped off my scrub top, buttoned my jacket, set the pager on its chargerthe long beep felt like a farewell.

Outside, a light dusting of snow filled the cracks between the cobbles. I inhaled the cold air, feeling steam rise from my lungs, and smiled despite the exhaustion. A spare tea bag rustled in my pocket, ready for the next shift. Cars rolled past as I paused for a halfminute of peace before heading to the bus stop. The night was over, and I had held on.

Lesson learned: in the darkest hours the smallest steady actionsmoistening a lip, adjusting a pillow, listening without judgmentcan keep the fragile thread of life from snapping.

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