Collision of protocol and chaos

The high of the Davies case was fleeting. Triumphs in medicine never bought you much more than a slightly heavier workload. My next challenge was securing a continuous eight-hour slot in OR Three for a complicated pediatric heart bypass. It was an elective surgery, but critical—a scheduled life-saver, which meant it was always at risk of being preempted by an unscheduled disaster.

I found Brenda, the OR scheduler, in her tiny, fortified office near the surgical wing, already looking stressed.

"Morning, Brenda," I said, handing her my finalized surgical plan. "I need the eight-hour guarantee for Tuesday. No interruptions. No splitting."

Brenda, a woman who had seen it all, adjusted her glasses. "I have you down, Dr. Sharma, but you know how Trauma is. They book ghost slots and then materialize at the last second. They already have Tuesday morning practically blocked out."

I sighed, tightening my grip on my briefcase. "They need to respect the rotation. Send a formal reminder that cardiac cases cannot be bumped for stable elective orthopedic surgeries."

"It's never orthopedic," Brenda muttered darkly. "It's always something urgent that should have been managed in the ER but they want the top-tier OR."

Before I could respond, the world outside Brenda’s office door seemed to warp. The air pressure shifted. A loud, booming voice, laced with frantic energy and pure, unapologetic demand, echoed down the hall.

"Brenda! I need you to rip up Tuesday! I'm going in on the Pendergast crash—he needs a three-hour window right now, and I need to book a two-hour follow-up at 0800 Tuesday before orthopedics steals it!"

A man burst into the doorway, not even waiting for a summons. He was tall, wearing a scrub cap pushed back haphazardly, revealing dark, damp hair. His eyes were wide with a focused, almost manic intensity, and he was using his entire body to articulate his urgency. He carried a smear of blood on his forearm and a faint scent of cheap coffee and adrenaline. He was the quintessential, arrogant, high-pressure Trauma Surgeon.

He slammed a clipboard onto Brenda's counter, right in front of the schedule I had just handed her, completely obscuring my name.

"Whoa, hold on!" I snapped, reacting instinctively.

He didn't even look at me. He was staring at the schedule board, his eyes scanning it like a hungry predator. "Brenda, I don't care about the cardio schedule. If I don't get the slot, Pendergast's recovery is compromised. We're talking emergent revision on a decompressed aorta. It’s priority one."

"It’s not on your emergency board, Doctor," Brenda said weakly, trying to regain control.

"It will be!" he retorted, already pulling a red marker out of a cup and leaning over the counter. "Just pencil me in for Tuesday morning. 0800. Two hours. Block it."

He was about to deface the official schedule—the schedule I relied on to perfectly time the delicate heart-lung machine and coordinate five different specialists. He was about to write over my hard-won time slot based on his "feeling."

"You absolutely will not," I commanded, moving swiftly.

I placed my hand firmly over the Tuesday column, directly blocking his marker. He finally paused, his eyes—a startling shade of green—snapping to mine. They were not hostile, but dismissive, as if I were a minor obstacle, like a broken chair or a spilled cup.

"Look, lady," he said, already frustrated. "I don’t know who you are, but this is a life-or-death scenario, not a tea party. Trauma does not wait for protocol."

"And I don't know who you are," I countered, my voice low and dangerous, "but I am Dr. Sharma, Senior Cardiologist. The surgeries scheduled here are also life-and-death scenarios, and they require planning. You don't just hijack the main operating room based on your momentary whims."

He actually scoffed. He took the marker in his hand and, with a quick, infuriating move, he simply moved his arm under mine, wrote a quick, messy, "TRAUMA: O'CONNELL" next to my designated time block, and then snatched his clipboard back.

"There," he declared, already turning toward the exit. "Problem solved. Brenda, you owe me a dozen sutures."

"That time is mine!" I yelled after him, an utterly unprofessional sound that surprised even me.

He paused in the doorway, giving me one last, challenging look. He didn't see a rival; he saw an administrative inconvenience.

"Get better at scheduling, Protocol," he threw over his shoulder, and then he was gone, leaving behind only a thick black mark next to my perfect calendar and the lingering, aggravating scent of his rush.

I stared at the black scrawl: TRAUMA: O'CONNELL. The name meant nothing to me, but the sheer, reckless audacity of the man—the embodiment of the chaotic department I resented—made me shake with fury.

I turned back to Brenda, my jaw tight. "That man," I said, pointing at the messy mark that had contaminated my perfect plan. "You tell that Trauma physician that I will personally ensure his team never sees the inside of a clean OR again. This is a declaration of war."

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