Chapter Fifteen: The Scar
Three months later, the board issued its final finding.
Full exoneration.
Written apology.
Permanent reinstatement.
Independent investigation expanded to four other physicians disciplined under donor pressure.
Skylar read the letter once.
Then placed it in a drawer.
The clinic was full.
That mattered more.
Dominic arrived that Tuesday with rolled sleeves, a toolbox, and no bodyguards inside the building. One waited outside because Carmela insisted.
Skylar did not argue with Carmela.
No one intelligent did.
The waiting room radiator had stopped screaming. The medication fridge was new. The drawer still opened smoothly.
Dominic mopped badly.
Skylar watched from the exam room doorway.
“You are terrible at that.”
“I command men.”
“Not dust.”
He looked at the mop.
“It resists hierarchy.”
She almost smiled.
A little girl in the waiting room pointed at Dominic’s scar beneath his open collar.
“Did it hurt?”
Her mother gasped.
Dominic looked at Skylar first.
As if asking permission to answer in her clinic.
Skylar nodded.
“Yes,” he told the child.
The girl pointed at Skylar’s cheek.
“That too?”
Skylar crouched.
“Yes.”
“Are you sad?”
Skylar touched the scar.
“No.”
Dominic stopped mopping.
The child frowned.
“Why?”
“Because it reminds people to be careful.”
The girl accepted this with the seriousness of children and stickers.
Dominic looked away.
After closing, Skylar found him in the doorway of the last exam room, staring at the wall where her license now hung.
Permanent.
Restored.
Not gifted.
Taken back.
“You should hang the apology too,” he said.
“No.”
“Why?”
“It does not deserve wall space.”
He nodded.
She liked when he did not argue.
Outside, rain began again.
Of course.
Their lives seemed to prefer rain.
Dominic reached into his coat and removed a small velvet box.
Skylar’s eyes cooled.
“Careful.”
“It is not a ring.”
He opened it.
Inside was a key.
Plain brass.
Old.
“The last key to the east tunnel,” he said. “It should be yours to destroy.”
Skylar stared at it.
A key to the passage Lorenzo used.
A key to Carmela’s fear.
A key to the house that had swallowed too many truths.
She took it.
Dominic did not let his fingers touch hers.
Not by accident.
By discipline.
Skylar walked to the clinic’s back door and stepped into the alley. Rain tapped the metal trash bins. Water ran black along the curb.
Dominic followed at a distance.
She placed the key on the concrete.
Then crushed it under the clinic’s emergency fire axe.
Once.
Twice.
The brass bent.
The past did not disappear.
But it stopped opening doors.
Skylar handed the axe to Dominic.
“Your turn.”
He looked at the broken key.
Then at her.
He struck once.
Clean.
Final.
When they returned inside, the lights flickered warmly over the empty waiting room.
Dominic hung the mop properly.
Wrong hook.
Skylar moved it to the right one.
He watched her hands.
Not hungrily.
Carefully.
She stood beside him.
Close enough to feel his breath.
Far enough to leave.
“I still hate parts of you,” she said.
“I know.”
“I still miss parts of you.”
His throat moved.
“I know.”
She touched the gold cross at her neck.
Then his sleeve.
Not his face.
Not yet.
“Come next Tuesday.”
He nodded.
“I will.”
No vow.
No kiss.
No grand declaration.
Only a man with a mop, a woman with a scar, and a door neither of them forced open.
Skylar turned off the clinic lights.
Dominic waited until she stepped outside first.
And the scar everyone thought marked the night she saved his mother was never the wound that changed them.
It was the first place he learned not to touch without being invited.