Drenched by morning storms, nurses across the Twin Cities were putting down their picket signs and getting ready to head back to work -- although they didn't know whether they'd be allowed to return.
"We will go in en masse," said Glenda Cartney, who was with dozens of other nurses striking outside United Hospital in St. Paul at 6 a.m. Friday.
The overnight shift at United is from 11 p.m. to 7:30 a.m., so nurses planned to clock in at 7 a.m. to cover the last 30 minutes of the shift. But they said they weren't sure whether they would be welcomed back or not.
Ten minutes before 7 a.m., the nurses were tossing their wet picket signs into piles or into a garbage container.
In the final hours of the biggest -- and perhaps shortest -- nursing strike in American history, both sides were declaring victory.
"It's so not about the money and I hope the message got out to the community that we care about the patients and that's why we're out here, " said Linda Schaefer , an ER nurse on the picket line outside United early Friday morning.
But neither the nurses union nor the hospitals could say what, exactly, will happen next.
The Minnesota Nurses Association and 14 Twin Cities hospitals still need to negotiate a new contract, and the impact of Thursday's boisterous one-day walkout remains unclear.