My dad and I both work at the same hospital. He’s a nurse, and I’m in social work. One day, a new nurse saw us hug and spread a rumor that we were having an affair.
By the next day, the gossip had spread everywhere. Later, the HR called us in. Then, the new nurse came in and started to cry.
Her name was Melina. She was new, maybe only two weeks into her rotation. We’d never exchanged more than a polite nod in the break room.
I didn’t even know her last name. But now she stood there, in front of HR, dabbing her eyes with a tissue and saying things that made my skin crawl. “He touched her lower back,” she sniffled.
“They were being…inappropriate in the hallway, near pediatrics.”
My dad looked like someone had kicked him in the gut. The HR officer, Ms. Tarlowe, kept a poker face but started scribbling something down.
I sat up straighter. “That man is my father,” I said, clear as I could. “My actual dad.
We share a last name. He’s been working here for 23 years. I was born when he was 20.
You can ask anyone on the third floor.”
Melina blinked. “Oh.”
That was it. Just—“oh.” No apology, no backtrack.
Like she’d just remembered she left the stove on, not that she’d accused two coworkers of being in a sexual relationship in a professional environment. HR asked us to step out. We sat on that fake leather couch in the hallway, in silence.
My dad rubbed his forehead. I could see the red rising on his neck, the way it always did when he was trying not to explode. “I shouldn’t’ve hugged you,” he said.
“I knew better.”
I shook my head. “You hugged me because I told you about the foster kid we lost last week. That’s normal.
That’s human.”
He sighed and looked out the window like he could disappear through it. We were cleared later that day, of course. HR confirmed our relationship through the employee system, looked at our emergency contacts, and even checked my birth certificate file.
Melina was “spoken to.” But no public correction was made. The gossip didn’t die. People stared differently.
There was whispering. A respiratory tech made a gross joke in the elevator when he thought I couldn’t hear. I stopped eating in the cafeteria.
My dad, always the favorite on the floor, started getting passed over for charge nurse shifts. Once, a resident asked him not to be assigned to a patient with a history of trauma. Just in case.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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