The Nurse He Ruined Returned, And His Secret Nearly Took Mia-rosocute

Adrien Volkov had spent most of his life teaching rooms to obey him before he ever opened his mouth.

Street Mercy Hospital was one of the few places where that gift had never fully worked.

Blood did not care about reputation.

Image

A bullet did not pause because a man owned half the fear in New York.

By 1:30 a.m., the trauma bay had learned that lesson in the harshest possible way, with Adrien under the lights, three gunshot wounds opened through his shirt, and Dr. Harlon trying to keep him alive long enough to make him consent to surgery.

Rain battered the emergency entrance with such force that the glass walls trembled.

Ambulance lights turned the puddles outside red.

Inside trauma room three, the air smelled of copper, wet leather, disinfectant, and panic hidden under professional voices.

Dr. Harlon had seen gang victims before.

He had seen men refuse police statements, refuse pain medication, refuse to give names.

He had never seen a man with a falling blood pressure refuse a surgery that would decide whether morning found him alive.

“Mr. Volkov, you have internal bleeding,” Harlon said, bending over him. “We operate now, or you die on this table.”

Adrien’s eyes opened.

Even pale and bleeding, he had a way of making people wait for him.

“No surgery,” he rasped.

The closest nurse tried to adjust his mask, and his hand locked around her wrist with a steadiness that made the whole room flinch.

“Find Elena.”

At first, nobody knew what to do with the name.

The resident holding the blood unit stopped mid-step.

A scrub nurse looked at Dr. Harlon.

One of Adrien’s men shifted near the door, and the motion made a security guard lower his hand slowly from his radio.

“Elena who?” Harlon demanded.

Adrien turned his head toward Victor, the only man in the room who looked less afraid of Adrien than of failing him.

“The blonde nurse.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *