MIA POV
The emergency door hits the wall hard enough to crack the paint.
Mia looks up from the chart she was pretending to care about at 11:47 PM and sees a man fall through like he'd been thrown. Blood hit the linoleum in a spray pattern her brain registered before her body moved. Three wounds. Chest, shoulder, side. He was still conscious, which meant either the bleeding hadn't hit an artery yet or he was too stubborn to let it.
She made a choice in the next two seconds that would burn the rest of her life down.
"Trauma bay. Now." Her voice came out steady. The night nurse, Carmen, was already moving because Carmen had worked at the Eastside Free Clinic long enough to know what dying looked like. The man didn't argue. He didn't even look at Mia as she grabbed his arm to help him up. His eyes were somewhere distant, like he was calculating odds in a language she didn't speak.
She got him on the table and didn't waste time asking questions. Questions were for people who had luxury. She had maybe six minutes before his body shut down.
The clinic's equipment was garbage. Worse than garbage. The suction machine was older than she was. The monitor kept cutting in and out. She had one bag of O-negative blood and a supply cabinet organized like someone had thrown darts at a wall to decide where medications went. She called the main hospital while Carmen was cutting away his shirt. They couldn't take him. Overcrowded. Gang violence protocols. She already knew what they'd say before she heard it.
So it was just Mia.
She'd never liked working with a team anyway. Teams had opinions. Teams could doubt. Teams got shaken when things went wrong. Mia worked best alone, under pressure, with her hands moving and her mind three steps ahead.
The first bullet had missed the subclavian artery by maybe half a centimeter. Lucky. The second had torn through muscle and grazed a rib but didn't penetrate deep. Less lucky but survivable. The third was the problem. She followed the trajectory with her fingers, feeling for the damage the bullet had left behind. Bleeding inside the chest cavity. Controlled right now, but that would change. She had minutes before his lung started drowning him.
She reached for the surgical kit. Carmen was hovering with the anesthesia cart, looking helpless, which meant the man was already refusing to go under. Mia looked up and met his eyes for the first time.
They were dark. Not black but the kind of dark that seemed to absorb light. He was watching her face like she was the only solid thing in a room full of water. His hand gripped the edge of the table hard enough that his knuckles went white.
"I need you unconscious," Mia said.
"No." His voice was rough, barely a whisper. "Pull it out and I am already dead."
She understood what he meant. He didn't trust the anesthesia or the hospital or maybe life in general. He wanted his eyes open. He wanted to stay aware. He wanted to know if she killed him.
So she operated on him conscious.
Ninety minutes. Her hands moved in the strange rhythm of someone who had done this enough times that her body knew what to do even when her mind was running in ten directions. Suction. Clamp. Stitch. Her back was a long scream of pain from standing bent over the table, but she didn't feel it. Adrenaline was a drug better than anything in her cabinet.
The man's eyes never left her face.
He was beautiful in the way dangerous things were beautiful. Strong jaw. A scar cutting through his left eyebrow like someone had tried to split his skull and failed. His dark hair was matted with blood but his eyes stayed focused and absolutely, utterly calm. She'd never seen someone who was bleeding out stay that calm. Fear did things to people. It made them twitch and gasp and beg. This man was just... present. Like he was watching a calculation happen instead of experiencing it.
She worked through the bleeding in his chest. Found the tear in his intercostal muscle. Repaired it. Sealed the wound. By the time she was closing the final suture her forearms were shaking but her hands were still solid. Carmen handed her the dressings without being asked. They'd worked together long enough for that.
When it was done, when the last bandage was in place, Mia stepped back and let out the breath she'd been holding since 11:47 PM. The monitor showed a heartbeat. Weak but there. His oxygen was climbing.
He was alive.
She checked his vitals twice. Three times. The blood loss was massive but she'd controlled it. The damage was extensive but not catastrophic. If nothing went septic and if he made it through the next forty eight hours, he might actually survive what someone had done to him.
She was reaching for the supply cabinet to grab a clean dressing when her eyes caught on his right wrist.
The tattoo.
It was small, placed on the inside of his wrist where you'd only see it if you were paying attention. A cross inside a circle. Black ink, clean lines, meant to be hidden but also meant to last forever.
Mia had lived in South Chicago her entire life. Her father had driven trucks through these streets. Her mother had cleaned offices here. She'd grown up in a neighborhood that everyone else drove through carefully and quickly and with their doors locked. She knew what that symbol meant the way she knew what a red light meant.
It meant danger.
It meant the Syndicate.
It meant the man on her table, the man she had just fought for ninety minutes to save, the man whose blood was now part of her scrubs and under her fingernails, was not just any man.
Her hands went cold.
She looked at his face again. Really looked at it this time, not as a medical problem but as a person. The stillness came into focus. The absolute refusal to panic. The way he'd watched her like she was the only thing that mattered in his world wasn't trust. It was assessment. It was a man counting resources and finding her useful.
She had just saved the life of someone she should have let die.
She reached for the supply cabinet on autopilot, her hand steady because her muscles knew how to keep working even when her mind was screaming. She kept her back to the man on the table. She made her breathing regular. She counted the seconds between heartbeats on the monitor and tried to build a plan from nothing.
The door to the trauma bay was still open. She could run. She could walk out of this clinic and disappear into Chicago and never look back. Nobody would stop her. Nobody would care.
Except for the fact that she'd made a choice. She'd picked up his arm and held it steady. She'd operated on him conscious, staring into his eyes for ninety minutes straight. She'd kept his heart beating when some other doctor in some other hospital would have called it.
And now she understood, with the clarity that came only from absolute clarity, exactly what she had done.
She had sewn herself to him.
