The emergency room doors slid open at 11:42 p.m., and Nora Sullivan stepped inside barefoot, drenched by the Chicago rain, and bleeding through the front of her white coat.
A nurse shouted for assistance immediately.
Two orderlies rushed toward her with a stretcher while another nurse pressed trembling fingers against Nora’s wrist, searching for a pulse strong enough to reassure them.
The blood spreading beneath her body across the polished hospital floor told them the situation was already critical.
“Ma’am, can you hear me?” the nurse asked urgently.
Nora’s eyelashes fluttered weakly.
“She… kicked me down the stairs,” she whispered.
Then she lost consciousness.
Within seconds, the emergency department erupted into controlled chaos.
Doctors barked orders across the trauma bay while machines beeped sharply in the background.
One resident cut open the sleeve of Nora’s coat to insert an IV while another examined the bruises darkening across her ribs and collarbone.
“She’s hemorrhaging internally,” a surgeon muttered grimly.
“Prep operating room three immediately.”
A younger nurse searched Nora’s pockets for identification while another carefully removed her soaked wedding ring and slipped it into a labeled plastic bag.
Inside her wallet, they found a medical ID card identifying her as Doctor Nora Sullivan, thirty-four years old, employed at Saint Augustine Medical Center.
The discovery stunned everyone around the trauma bed.
One of their own had arrived nearly beaten to death.
“Call her husband,” the attending physician instructed without hesitation.
The nurse nodded and opened Nora’s emergency contact information on the hospital database.
Then she froze.
The room suddenly grew quieter around her.
“What is it?” the physician demanded.
The nurse swallowed hard.
“I think… this has to be wrong.”
The attending stepped closer.
“Why?”
The nurse turned the screen toward him slowly.
Under emergency contact, there was no husband listed.
No parent.
No sibling.
Instead, a single name appeared in bold letters.
Lucien Moretti.
Every person in the room recognized the name instantly.
Even in Chicago’s wealthiest neighborhoods, people lowered their voices when speaking about Lucien Moretti.
Officially, he was a powerful businessman who owned restaurants, shipping companies, casinos, and half the luxury real estate lining Lake Shore Drive.
Unofficially, everyone knew he was the most feared mafia boss in the city.
The nurse stared at the screen again, hoping she had misread it.
But the number remained there beside his name.
“Call him,” the physician ordered carefully.
The nurse hesitated.
“You want me to contact Lucien Moretti at midnight and tell him Doctor Sullivan is dying?”
“Yes,” the physician replied.
“If she trusted him enough to make him her emergency contact, we don’t have a choice.”
The call connected after only one ring.
A deep male voice answered immediately.
“Who is this?”
The nurse nearly forgot how to speak.
“Sir, this is Saint Augustine Medical Center. I’m calling regarding Doctor Nora Sullivan.”
There was silence on the other end for exactly two seconds.
Then the voice changed completely.
“What happened to her?”
The calm disappeared instantly, replaced by something dangerous and cold enough to chill the nurse straight through the phone.
“She arrived with severe internal injuries,” the nurse explained shakily.
“She’s being taken into surgery now.”
Another silence followed.
But this one felt heavier.
“Is she alive?” Lucien asked quietly.
“Yes, but—”
“I’ll be there in ten minutes.”
The line disconnected.
Inside operating room three, surgeons worked frantically beneath glaring white lights while rain hammered the hospital windows.
Nora’s heartbeat weakened twice during the procedure.
Each time, alarms exploded across the room while doctors fought desperately to stabilize her.
“She has a ruptured spleen,” one surgeon announced.
“And at least three fractured ribs.”
Another doctor stared grimly at the bruises covering her abdomen.
“This wasn’t an accident.”
Outside the operating room, nurses exchanged nervous glances after hearing the name Moretti whispered repeatedly through the hallways.
No one knew why Chicago’s most powerful criminal figure was connected to a trauma surgeon known for volunteering at free clinics and avoiding attention completely.
The answer arrived nine minutes later.
The hospital entrance doors opened sharply as Lucien Moretti stepped inside surrounded by four men in black suits.
The lobby instantly fell silent.
He was taller than most people expected, broad-shouldered, wearing a charcoal overcoat still damp from rain.
His dark hair was slicked back neatly, and the expensive watch on his wrist probably cost more than the average nurse’s yearly salary.
But it was his expression that terrified everyone.
Lucien did not look angry.
He looked lethal.
The receptionist behind the desk visibly trembled when he approached.
“Where is she?” he asked calmly.
The receptionist opened her mouth but no sound emerged.
A nearby nurse quickly intervened and guided Lucien toward the surgical wing.
“She’s still in surgery,” the nurse explained carefully.
“They’re doing everything they can.”
Lucien stopped walking.
For one brief second, emotion cracked through the cold mask on his face.
Fear.
Real fear.
Then it vanished just as quickly.
“Who did this to her?” he asked softly.
The nurse shook her head.
“She mentioned someone pushing her down the stairs before she lost consciousness.”
Lucien’s jaw tightened.
“Her husband?”
“We don’t know yet.”
One of the men standing behind Lucien quietly stepped forward.
“Boss, should I make some calls?”
Lucien never looked away from the operating room doors.
“Yes.”
The bodyguard nodded once and disappeared down the hallway immediately.
For the next hour, Lucien remained motionless outside surgery.
Doctors, nurses, and patients avoided looking directly at him, though everyone felt his presence like pressure in the air.
Even the security guards kept their distance.
At 1:13 a.m., the operating room doors finally opened.
The lead surgeon removed his gloves and approached cautiously.
“She survived.”
Lucien closed his eyes briefly.
The relief that crossed his face lasted less than a second, but the surgeon noticed it.
“She lost a dangerous amount of blood,” the doctor continued.
“And frankly, the injuries suggest prolonged abuse.”
Lucien’s expression darkened instantly.
“She’ll recover physically,” the surgeon added.
“But emotionally…”
He hesitated.
“She was terrified when she came in.”
Lucien nodded once.
“Can I see her?”
The surgeon studied him carefully before answering.
“Family only.”
One of Lucien’s bodyguards looked offended by the response, but Lucien merely reached into his coat pocket and removed a folded piece of paper.
He handed it to the surgeon silently.
The doctor unfolded it slowly.
Then his eyes widened.
It was a notarized legal document granting Lucien Moretti medical decision authority over Nora Sullivan in emergency situations.
Signed six months earlier.
The surgeon looked back up in disbelief.
Lucien’s voice remained calm.
“She trusted me.”
Minutes later, he entered Nora’s recovery room alone.
The steady rhythm of the heart monitor echoed softly through the darkness while rain continued streaking across the windows overlooking downtown Chicago.
Nora lay motionless beneath pale hospital blankets, bruises shadowing her face despite the nurses’ attempts to cover them gently.
Lucien approached the bedside slowly, almost cautiously.
The ruthless businessman feared by half the city suddenly looked nothing like the man whispered about in criminal investigations and police reports.
Standing beside Nora, he looked exhausted.
Heartbroken.
He reached carefully for her hand, avoiding the IV tubes taped against her skin.
“You should’ve called me sooner,” he murmured quietly.
His thumb brushed lightly across her bruised knuckles.
The tenderness of the gesture felt almost impossible coming from a man with his reputation.
For years, rumors surrounded Lucien Moretti endlessly.
Stories about disappearances.
Corrupt politicians.
Violence hidden beneath tailored suits and luxury penthouses.
But none of those rumors mentioned Nora Sullivan.
No one knew she had once saved his life.
Five years earlier, Lucien had arrived at Saint Augustine Medical Center after a gunshot wound nearly tore through his lung during an attempted assassination.
Police were searching the city for him that night while rival families waited eagerly for confirmation of his death.
Nora had been the surgeon on duty.
She recognized him immediately.
Every person in Chicago knew his face.
Yet she operated anyway.
She never called the police.
Never leaked his condition.
Never asked for money.
When Lucien regained consciousness after surgery, he expected fear from her.
Instead, Nora simply adjusted his IV and informed him he needed six weeks of recovery.
“You saved my life,” he had told her quietly.
“You were my patient,” Nora replied.
“That’s my job.”
Lucien had spent years surrounded by people who wanted power, money, protection, or favors.
Nora Sullivan wanted nothing from him.
And somehow, that became the most dangerous thing of all.
Because Lucien Moretti fell in love with her that winter.
Silently.
Hopelessly.
Completely.
He never intended to tell her.
Nora represented everything clean in a world Lucien had stained permanently with blood and violence.
She belonged in operating rooms saving lives, not standing beside men like him at charity galas while politicians secretly kissed his ring.
So he stayed away.
Mostly.
He occasionally sent anonymous donations to Nora’s free clinic projects.
Whenever she worked late, one of Lucien’s security vehicles quietly followed her home from a distance to ensure she remained safe without ever realizing it.
Then Nora married Daniel Sullivan two years later.
A successful financial consultant.
Educated.
Charming.
Respected.
Exactly the kind of man Lucien believed she deserved.
So he disappeared from her life entirely.
At least, that was what Nora thought.
What Lucien never told her was that he investigated Daniel before the wedding.
And what he found disturbed him deeply.
Debt.
Secret gambling problems.
Unexplained violent incidents buried quietly through expensive lawyers.
Lucien tried warning Nora once.
“You don’t know him,” he told her carefully during a chance encounter outside her hospital.
Nora smiled sadly at him.
“And you do?”
“Yes.”
But she shook her head gently.
“Daniel loves me.”
Lucien remembered the look in her eyes that day.
Hopeful.
Certain.
He hated himself for destroying it.
So he let her walk away.
Now she lay bruised and unconscious beneath hospital lights while machines breathed beside her bed.
Lucien stared down at her silently.
Then the door behind him opened.
One of his men entered carefully.
“We confirmed it,” the bodyguard said quietly.
“Her husband attacked her tonight after an argument.”
Lucien’s face remained unreadable.
“He’s currently at their apartment,” the bodyguard continued.
“Drunk. Witnesses heard screaming earlier.”
A long silence followed.
Finally, Lucien released Nora’s hand gently and stood.
“What about the neighbors?” he asked.
“They heard her begging him to stop.”
Something cold settled permanently into Lucien’s eyes.
The bodyguard hesitated before speaking again.
“What do you want done?”
Lucien adjusted the cuffs of his dark coat slowly.
Then he looked back once at the unconscious woman lying in the hospital bed.
The woman he had secretly loved for five years.
When he finally spoke, his voice was terrifyingly calm.
“Bring Daniel Sullivan to me.”