The Night A Poor Nurse Challenged Fifteen Doctors In A Locked Suite-hothiyenvy_5

The flatline did not sound like grief at first.

It sounded mechanical.

It was one long, clean, merciless tone that filled Suite 404 at St. Anne’s Medical Center while October rain beat against the windows and turned Chicago into a smear of red tail lights, black glass, and wet concrete.

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Fifteen doctors stood around the incubator.

One newborn lay still beneath the warmer.

Dominic Moretti stood at the center of the room with a gun pressed to the temple of Dr. Alistair Sterling, the hospital’s head of pediatric surgery.

“Bring him back,” Dominic said.

Nobody answered.

Not because they did not understand him.

Because every person in that room understood him too well.

Dominic Moretti was not a man hospital administrators corrected in hallways.

He had cleared the fourth floor with one phone call, posted armed guards at the elevators, and turned a private recovery suite into a room full of specialists who had been flown in from Boston, Los Angeles, Houston, New York, and Zurich.

He had paid for certainty.

Now all that money stood useless around a baby who had been alive for three hours.

Sophia Moretti, Dominic’s younger sister, lay unconscious in the bed a few feet away.

Her face was pale, her hair damp at the temples, and even under sedation her lashes held tears.

Earlier that night, she had whispered the name Leonardo through pain and exhaustion, and Dominic had bent close enough for only her to hear.

No harm will come to him.

That was what he had promised.

The kind of man Dominic was made that promise terrifying.

Not tender.

Terrifying.

Dr. Sterling’s hand shook so badly the syringe in his fingers caught the overhead light in tiny flashes.

“Mr. Moretti,” he said, his voice thin, “we did everything possible.”

Dominic did not blink.

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