“I Cut Open A 6-Year-Old Boy’s Cast In The ER… What Dropped Out Made Me Sick To My Stomach.”
Chapter 1
I’ve worked as a pediatric ER nurse for over fifteen years, and I thought I had seen everything.
Broken bones. Playground accidents. Trauma that lingers long after your shift ends—when you’re lying awake at 3 a.m., staring at the ceiling.
You learn to build a wall around your heart just to survive.
But sometimes… something slips through that wall.
And it doesn’t just shake you.
It breaks you.
This was one of those nights.
It was a Tuesday, around 1:45 a.m.
That strange, heavy quiet of the graveyard shift had settled over the ER. Outside, rain hammered against the glass doors, washing the streets clean. Inside, fluorescent lights buzzed softly overhead.
I was at the nurses’ station, holding my third cup of stale coffee, counting down the minutes until my shift ended.
Then the doors slid open.
A family walked in.
At first glance, they looked perfect. The kind of family you’d see in a magazine ad.
The father—tall, sharply dressed, not a hair out of place despite the storm.
The mother—elegant, polished, designer clothes, flawless makeup at nearly 2 a.m.
But it wasn’t them that caught my attention.
It was the little boy between them.
Let’s call him Evan.
He was six… but he looked much smaller. Thin. Fragile.
He wore an oversized, faded T-shirt that slipped off one shoulder. His head hung low, chin tucked down, as if even holding it up was too much effort.
And on his left arm—
A thick, green fiberglass cast.
“Hi there, what brings you in tonight?” I asked, offering my usual calm smile.
The mother stepped forward, resting her manicured hand on the counter.
“We need this cast removed,” she said smoothly. “It’s been on long enough, and Evan says it’s itchy. We just want it off.”
Her voice was controlled. Polished.
But cold.
She didn’t look at him once.
I pulled up their chart.
She claimed he broke his arm falling off a swing set—four weeks ago—while they were visiting relatives out of state.
“Four weeks?” I repeated, glancing at the cast.
Something felt… off.
Kids are rough on casts. They get scratched, dirty, worn.
But this one?
It looked old.
Too old.
The surface was grimy, frayed at the edges, the green faded into a dull, sickly brown. It looked like it had been there for months.
“Is there a problem?” the father asked, stepping closer.
His tone was polite.
But firm.
Possessive.
“No problem,” I said quickly. “Let’s get him into a room.”
I led them down the hallway.
“Hey, Evan,” I said gently, crouching slightly as we walked. “I like your cast. Did you pick the color?”
