Chapter One: The Man On The Trauma Table

Dr. Elena Vale was thirty-two, exhausted, and still the sharpest surgeon in Chicago Mercy.
Her hands did not shake.
Not after eighteen hours in trauma. Not after two failed resuscitations. Not after a hospital board that kept cutting budgets and asking why more poor people kept bleeding through the doors.
She stood under fluorescent lights, scrubbing blood from beneath her nails.
“Elena.”
Mara, the charge nurse, stood by the sliding doors.
“We have another one.”
“Ambulance?”
“No.”
The doors opened.
Four men in black suits entered first.
Their eyes swept exits, cameras, staff. Their hands stayed near their jackets.
Then the fifth man stepped in.
Tall. Pale. Bleeding through a white shirt beneath a black coat.
Elena’s breath stopped.
Damian Volkov.
Seven years became one second.
He raised his head.
His gray eyes found hers.
“Doctor Vale.”
Her name sounded like an old wound reopening.
One of his men spoke.
“No police.”
Mara stiffened.
“This is a hospital.”
Damian lifted one hand.
“Enough.”
The room obeyed him.
Elena hated that.
She pulled on gloves.
“Trauma Three.”
A guard moved into her path.
“No one treats him alone.”
Elena looked past him at Damian.
“Then he dies surrounded.”
Silence.
Damian’s mouth twitched, but pain ruined the almost-smile.
“Everyone out.”
“Boss—”
“Out.”
They left.
Only Elena remained.
Damian sat on the trauma table, breathing through a knife wound under his ribs. His shirt clung to him, dark with blood.
Elena cut the fabric open.
Scars crossed his body.
One white scar near his heart made her fingers still.
She had stitched that one when they were twenty-five and stupid enough to think love could outrun bloodlines.
“Pain scale.”
“Four.”
“Lie better.”
“Eight.”
She cleaned the wound.
He watched her face, not her hands.
“You became a surgeon.”
“You became a criminal.”
“I was born into it.”
“You chose to stay.”
His jaw tightened.
She pushed anesthetic into the tissue.
He finally closed his eyes.
For one second, he looked like the man who had held her outside Saint Agnes Cathedral.
Then she remembered the rain.
The humiliation.
His voice saying she was a mistake.
She stitched him with clean, angry precision.
“You need rest. No alcohol. No fighting. No dramatic exits.”
“You remembered my habits.”
“I remember many things I wish I didn’t.”
When she finished, he reached into his coat.
She stepped back.
He stopped.
Slowly, he placed a black card on the tray.
No name.
Just a number.
“If you need anything.”
“I needed you seven years ago.”
His face went still.
She stripped off her gloves.
“Get out.”
He looked at the card.
Then at her.
“You should not have saved me.”
“I know.”
His men took him into the night.
The black card stayed beside bloody gauze and silver scissors.
By dawn, Trauma Three’s cameras had failed.
By midnight, a black car waited outside Elena’s apartment.
A knock came.
“Elena Vale,” a man said.
“Mr. Volkov ordered us to bring you.”