Chapter 4: The Angel Returns
The classified federal facility sat disguised as an anonymous logistics warehouse on the outskirts of Chicago.
As the Black Hawk’s wheels slammed onto the concrete roof, Emily unbuckled and moved before the rotors even slowed. The facility hummed with a specific quality of controlled, terrifying urgency.
Two trauma nurses in sterile scrubs fell into step beside her as she cleared the security checkpoint.
“OR 2 is prepped and waiting,” the taller nurse said rapidly. “Patient is deeply intubated. Central lines are in. We are running a final echo now.”
“What is his ejection fraction?” Emily demanded, walking so fast the nurses had to jog.
“Thirty-eight percent.”
Emily processed the grim number without breaking stride. Thirty-eight was dangerously low. The heart muscle was failing after six hours of systemic shock.
She pushed through the double doors into the sterile corridor. At the deep stainless-steel scrub sink outside OR 2, Dr. James Reeves was waiting. He was forty-one, highly intelligent, and currently looking at Emily’s cheap Mercy General scrubs with deep skepticism.
“Major Carter,” Reeves said formally.
“Dr. Reeves,” Emily said, turning on the scalding water and grabbing a scrub brush. “What is your immediate read on the fragment position?”
Reeves blinked, clearly expecting a polite introduction. He recovered quickly. “The metal fragment is sitting at approximately the four o’clock position on the posterior aortic wall. There is no active bleeding yet, but the wall is heavily compromised. Any significant pressure change, it migrates, and he bleeds out in under ninety seconds.”
“Correct,” Emily said, aggressively scrubbing her hands with iodine. “What is your preferred approach?”
“Left thoracic fifth intercostal space,” Reeves answered confidently.
“Sixth,” Emily corrected instantly. “The severe angle of the shrapnel means the sixth intercostal gives me vastly better visualization without having to forcefully retract against his lung. His lung is already failing. We do not add to that trauma.”
She stopped scrubbing and turned her terrifying, piercing gaze directly onto him.
“Dr. Reeves, I was told you ask a lot of unnecessary questions,” Emily said softly.
Reeves swallowed hard. “I’ve… been told that.”
“During this surgery, you do exactly what I say,” Emily ordered, her voice cold steel. “If you disagree with my method, you say one word. I will hear it. But I make the final call. Are we absolutely clear?”
“Completely clear, Major,” Reeves said, his professional ego rearranging itself into pure submission.
“Good.”
Emily rinsed her hands, backed through the OR doors with her elbows, and stepped into the blinding surgical lights.
CIA Director Alan Morrison lay on the table, gray, fragile, and clinging to life by a thread.
“Scalpel,” Emily demanded, holding her hand out.
For the first time in three years, she wasn’t a hidden floor nurse taking abuse from arrogant doctors. She was the Angel of Kandahar.
Twenty-two grueling minutes into the intense procedure, Emily found the metal fragment.
It was a jagged, horrific piece of twisted steel, pressing dangerously against the pulsing, fragile wall of the aorta. It was a localized catastrophe waiting to detonate.
The entire operating room fell dead silent. Everyone present knew the next sixty seconds would definitively determine if the Director of the CIA lived or died in this room.
“Pressure?” Emily asked, her hands completely steady.
“Seventy-four systolic,” the anesthesiologist replied nervously. “Barely above your absolute minimum.”
Emily took a deep breath. “Dr. Reeves, when I forcefully remove this fragment, you are going to feel an overwhelming biological urge to react to the horror of what you see.”
Reeves stared at her over his mask, sweat beading on his forehead.
“Do not react,” Emily commanded fiercely. “Keep your retractors exactly where they are, regardless of how much blood hits your gloves. Can you do that?”
“Yes,” Reeves choked out.
“Hold him steady,” Emily whispered.
She positioned the heavy forceps. She locked her wrists. In one smooth, impossibly precise motion, she ripped the jagged fragment out of the aortic wall.
The arterial wall violently blew open.
A massive, catastrophic fountain of dark red blood erupted into the chest cavity. It was the kind of explosive, unstoppable bleeding that ended lives in seconds. It was a wall of red that screamed game over in every language modern medicine spoke.
“Pressure is dropping!” the anesthesiologist screamed in pure panic. “Sixty! Fifty-five! She’s bleeding him out!”
Emily didn’t blink. “Hold the damn retractors, James!”
“It’s too much blood, Major!” James screamed, his hands violently shaking as the blood pooled over his wrists. “We have to pack it! He’s dying!”
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