Chapter 145: Charming My Nurse
The next few periods dragged the way bad Netflix dramas do—predictable, padded, and just begging for someone to skip to the good part. Computer class was a joke. Madison had her arm wrapped around mine, scrolling through her phone with the casual ownership of a girl who knows the room bends to her orbit.
Mr. Patterson's lecture on "basic programming concepts" was less education and more ASMR for people into self-inflicted boredom. I could've taught it better in my sleep—if I ever slept for free.
ARIA whispered updates through my earbuds like a mistress in a spy movie: "Sister Emma remains in designated classroom areas. Biometric readings show continued elevated stress but within normal parameters."
Translation: Whatever's bothering my sister isn't escalating into crisis mode yet.'
Mr. Patterson didn't say a word about Madison hanging off me. He wouldn't. Not when the school's invisible caste system gave smart kids diplomatic immunity and trust fund heirs divine right.
I was both now—smarter than him and holding court with one of the school's golden daughters.
Calling me out would've been like arresting the mayor's son for jaywalking.
Plus, it would have been awkward for Mr. Patterson to call me out when I'd just corrected a mistake in his quiz question before answering it.
"Actually, that code snippet has a syntax error in line three," I'd pointed out casually. "Should be 'elif' not 'elseif' in Python."
'Hard to discipline someone who's teaching your class better than you are.'
That wasn't showing off. That was reminding the room exactly where the food chain started.
Like usual, Lea and Sofia sat together, pretending to listen to the lesson but burning through their peripheral vision on me and Madison.
Jack Morrison's crew was doing the same, still trying to reverse-engineer how the former punching bag was suddenly dating a girl whose allowance could buy their houses twice over.
'How exhausting. I'm trying to build an empire, and they're still invested in the high school version of a reality show subplot.'
I'd tell them to focus on their own lives, but it was also more fun watching them speculate.
After computer class ended, I made a decision that surprised even me. Instead of heading to my next period, I found myself walking back toward the infirmary. Somewhere that might test just how far my new leash reached.
'Time to test some boundaries and see what's possible.'
I knocked on the infirmary's doorframe and stepped inside. Valentina looked up from her computer, eyes widening just enough to let me know I'd already crossed one of her lines.
"Peter..." she said, surprise sharpening her tone. "I wasn't expecting you after we finished everything that needed your presence here."
She was right. No medical excuse. No lingering wound to justify the visit. Just me, walking in because I decided the room was mine to enter.
'Here goes nothing.'
"I was wondering if you're free tonight," I said—casual but deliberate. No fumbling, no preamble. Hunters don't stalk by apologizing for the noise they make. "After school. Just us."
Her eyebrows lifted—not in dismissal, but in recalculation. The shift was subtle, curiosity replacing surprise, like she'd just realized the chessboard had more pieces than she thought.
"That's... an interesting proposition, Peter," she said, slow and careful. But careful isn't rejection—it's consideration. "What did you have in mind?"
'She's not shutting the door. She's checking what's behind it. But also teasing me to see what I have to say before she turns me down and play her nurse-student card. Make me rumble my mind and turn me down. Won't happen. I wont let it.'
"Coffee," I said. Simple. Clean. Non-threatening—on paper. "There's this place downtown that's always full of college students and professionals. I thought maybe we could talk about your studies, your plans for emergency medicine. I'm genuinely curious about your goals."
Her posture softened. Professional guard rails loosened. Interest—real interest—flickered in her eyes.
"And what would you know about my emergency medicine focus? Not to offend you but you're but a high school student..." she said leaning in with a teasing smirk getting ready to see a teen make a fool of himself trying to impress his hot nurse.
Clearly; this happens to her often... it's just that... this is me!
"You mentioned pursuing your nurse practitioner certification earlier. Emergency medicine is pressure cooking in real time—rapid differential diagnosis, pattern recognition you can't teach in a textbook."
Her eyes lit up. I'd pressed the right key, and the door swung wider. "Exactly... *ahem*"She coughed to hide the fact that I had pressed the right buttons.
"Uh... I mean... Most people think it's just about following protocols, but the real skill is reading between the lines when patients don't present with textbook symptoms."
"Like distinguishing chest pain from anxiety versus early MI in a young female," I said. "Referred pain patterns that save a life if you catch them."
She moved—physically moved—from her desk to the student chair next to me. Not a big distance, but the kind you only cross when you forget you're supposed to keep it.
"How do you know about referred cardiac pain patterns?" Genuine amazement. "Some of what you just said... I learned that in advanced coursework last semester. And you're just a high..."
"I read everything," I said cutting in. "Medical journals, emergency medicine publications. When something interests me, I go deep."
"You read medical journals as a hobby?" She shook her head, smiling in a way that was starting to slip past professional. "Peter, that's graduate-level material."
"What's been giving you the most trouble in your studies?" I asked instead.
"Pediatric sepsis recognition," she said instantly. The excitement was tangible now, the kind that happens when someone realizes you speak their language without an accent. "Kids compensate so well until they crash completely. The subtle signs are killing me."
"Like Tachycardia disproportionate to fever, delayed cap refill, altered mental status parents write off as 'tired,'" I listed. "But the real indicator? Urine output tanks before vitals do."
I wasn't speaking her language just because I cared about cardiac patterns. I was speaking it because most men her age couldn't. Because fluency in someone's passion rewires the way they look at you—turns you from stranger to exception.
I wanted her curious. I wanted her to realize I wasn't just another boy in her day. I could be the one who understood her world and could help her conquer it. People trust the hand that sharpens their blade.
"Yes!" She practically bounced in her chair, and the professional nurse mask fell clean off. For the first time since I'd met her, I wasn't talking to the gatekeeper of the infirmary—I was talking to the student underneath her gig as our nurse.
The one who lit up when someone matched her stride. "My preceptor kept drilling that—'trust your gut when something feels off, even if the numbers look okay. Because...'"
"Because by the time pediatric vitals crash, you're already behind the curve," I finished for her.
She went quiet, studying me. And just like that, the room shifted. She wasn't seeing a student anymore. She was looking at someone who could match her—someone who shouldn't have been able to—no longer nurse to student, but one person genuinely intrigued by another.