The Woman He Left Behind Was Rushed Past Him Carrying His Child-kieutrinh

By the time Cormack Hale saw Brin Holloway on the emergency gurney, his phone had already hit the carpet at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

It made a dull sound, small and almost polite, the kind of sound expensive things make when they fall in places built to absorb panic.

He did not bend to pick it up.

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He did not even look down.

One moment earlier, Cormack had been sitting in the VIP waiting lounge with one ankle resting over his knee, answering encrypted messages on a titanium-cased phone while Yara Salcedo complained beside him that the pain in her stomach had gotten sharper.

The room smelled faintly of antiseptic, lilies, and coffee that had gone cold in a paper cup.

A television in the corner played a home renovation show on mute.

Outside the glass doors, two of Cormack’s men stood in dark suits, scanning the hallway without moving their heads much.

To anyone else on that floor, Cormack looked like money.

Clean watch.

Quiet shoes.

Calm face.

A businessman waiting for a private doctor to finish checking on his girlfriend.

That was the point of the suit, the watch, the careful silence.

Cormack Hale had spent twenty-two years learning how to make dangerous things look boring.

At thirty-seven, he controlled more than anyone in polite Chicago would ever admit.

Gaming companies that washed cash.

Private docks where night shipments arrived under friendly paperwork.

Security contracts that were not only security.

Attorneys who answered at midnight.

Men who knew not to make him repeat himself.

Yara Salcedo sat across from him, beautiful, irritated, and useful.

Her father, Aurelio Salcedo, was not a man Cormack ignored.

The hospital visit was supposed to be simple.

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