| Francis
Ray, RN, school nurse practitioner, leads two lives.
By day, she is a school nurse to 550 elementary
school children in the Dallas Independent School
District. By night, she escapes into the world of
fantasy, romance and fiction.
A best-selling author and pioneer of romance novels
for the African-American market, Ray, 55, often taps
into her nursing skills to create characters for her
last 13 books.
Her first book, Forever Yours (1992), made Essence
magazine's best-seller list and sold 90,000 copies. Her
latest novel, Somebody's Knocking at My Door, was
released by St. Martin's Press in March. Ray also signed
a two-contract deal for two more novels with St.
Martin's Press for a six-figure sum.
Not bad for a school nurse.
But if you talk to Ray, she's soft-spoken and
dedicated to her nursing career. "I like my job. It's
challenging," she said. As a nurse for three schools,
she's the sole medical presence on campus.
In a health care setting, Ray is detail-oriented,
disciplined and thorough. A typical day may consist of
seeing up to 30 patients. During this time, she takes
few breaks and eats lunch at her desk. For instance, if
a child has appendicitis, she must make a correct
evaluation and call the parents. Her nonstop days are
filled with treating and diagnosing illnesses, giving
eye tests, bandaging knees or just "being a good
listener."
How did Ray get into nursing? "I blame it on my
mother," she said, laughing.
At age 8, Ray and her brother were playing with
firecrackers, when she accidentally lit herself on fire,
burning 80 percent of her body. After her mother
observed the kindness of hospital nurses who treated her
daughter, she entered the nursing profession.
When Ray was in college, her mother encouraged
her to pursue a career in health care. After 20 years of
nursing, Ray believes her writing extends her need to be
a caregiver.
"In my nursing job, no day is the same," Ray said.
"Sometimes in nursing, we feel helpless when we can't
fix something-facing situations we can't change. But in
my writing, I have the opportunity to solve problems,"
which keeps her readers happy.
But how does she handle her dual career? After a day
of treating children's aches, sprains and bruises, she
returns home. There, she shuts the door to her study and
sits down in front of her computer, where she feels calm
and assured. From 7 to 11 each evening, she takes no
calls and limits communication with her family, as she
"floats" into a make-believe world. Sometimes, "the
characters speak to me," Ray said.
But she never leaves her nursing skills far
behind.
In her book The Turning Point, published by St.
Martin's Press in 2001, her main character has an optic
hemorrhage. After being battered in a carjacking, he
becomes blind. "Understanding that ailment helped me
create a more realistic character," she said.
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