“Why are you always on the night shift? Normally, you can’t have more than three night shifts a week, because your sensitivity drops during surgeries and problems might ur. You just became a regr employee–haven’t you told the director?” asked Megan.
After saying that, she remembered that Jake was in Chris’s department, so it must have been arranged by Chris himself.
Jake was eating snacks at the nurse station, watching a TV drama with them.
“Recently, Dr. Wills has had family issues, so I’ve been covering the night shifts while he works the day shifts. He said it wouldst for half a month. I’m young and can handle staying upte anyway. I don’t sleep much when I get home.”
Megan said, “That still isn’t okay.”
“Megan, you work in the pharmacy. Howe you’re always at the emergency department too? You’re supposed to just stay inside the pharmacy during night shifts and sleep. Why do youe out?”
Megan smiled a little awkwardly, looked away, and said, “The pharmacy is too cold. The air conditioning is always on inside. It’s warmer here. Besides, the hospital is cold and empty — I feel safer where there are more people.”
“No way, Megan, you actually believe that? We’re medical students, we shouldn’t believe in superstitions.”
“Yes, yes, I don’t believe it. It’s just too cold in there.”
Jake seemed to be staring at his phone screen, but in fact, his peripheral vision was constantly observing Megan’s profile.
He noticed that Megan always nced toward one particr ward
Secretly, Jake checked on hisputer and found that this ward housed a car ident victim.
Severe car idents can endanger the whole body and usually require a long hospital stay, because healing internal organs and bones was a major process.
The patient in room 316 had been there for over six month and was a woman who almost always had visitors every day.
Megan’s gaze never left that room.
There had to be something wrong with room 316.
Knowing the situation, Jake immediately informed Chris.
The car ident involving the patient in room 316 was not suspicious–it really was an ident, but she was caught in the middle of it.
Six cars collided, and she was in the center.
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When she was first brought to the hospital, she was covered in blood and her heart had stopped beating.
They barely managed to save her, but she remained unconscious for over a month.
“She’s been here for over six months and should be discharged soon. I checked the room, her major bones have started healing.
I gave my rmendation she can leave next month and still go home for the New Year,” said Ashley.
Chris looked at the surveince footage on the screen and split off one window to check the patient file for room 316,
Mandy Milton was a 24–year–old girl.
It was said she was an outstanding student in the foreignnguage department.
Before the ident, she had just finished an Englian interview and was about to return <b>to </b>organize the materials, but then she ended up in the hospital instead.
1
No matter how you looked at it, she had no connection to the Hall family.
“Mandy… why do I feel like I’ve seen that face somewhere before?” Chris held the mouse in one hand and tapped lightly on the desk with the other.
He always felt that Mandy’s face… no, not exactly seen before, but the outline looked very familiar.
“Mandy has always been in Impelia. She even went to university there. Her parents are ordinary people one is a university professor and the other a PhD in medicine. I think they work at some pharmaceuticalpany,” said Ashley.
Hearing this, Chris looked up at Ashley.
“Did you find this out?”
Ashley flipped his tablet around, showing him the chat history between him and Shannon.
Chris was speechless.
Shannon really was capable of everything.
Right now, the Wilder Group was probably having a meeting about the cooperation with Hurricane Media.
As chief secretary, Shannon was definitely apanying Jessica, yet she still had time to investigate Mandy’s situation.