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After My Groom Defended the Woman Who Almost Killed Me Novel Cover

After My Groom Defended the Woman Who Almost Killed Me

The ER at Harborview didn’t smell like antiseptic anymore. It smelled like copper and wet asphalt—the scent of a rainy Tuesday colliding with a pileup on I-5. I moved through the chaos, the familiar thrum of controlled panic settling into my bones. Trauma Bay One was a cacophony of alarms and shouting, a symphony I’d conducted a thousand times. But the sound that cut through the noise wasn't a monitor; it was the wet, sucking gasp of a drowning man. "O2 sats dropping! Sixty-five percent!" I spun toward Bay Two. The curtain was half-drawn, revealing a terrifying tableau. The patient, a middle-aged man from the pileup, was thrashing, his face turning a dusky violet. And standing over him, holding a central line kit with shaking hands, was Valentina Moreno.
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Chapter 1

The ER at Harborview didn’t smell like antiseptic anymore. It smelled like copper and wet asphalt—the scent of a rainy Tuesday colliding with a pileup on I-5.

I moved through the chaos, the familiar thrum of controlled panic settling into my bones. Trauma Bay One was a cacophony of alarms and shouting, a symphony I’d conducted a thousand times. But the sound that cut through the noise wasn't a monitor; it was the wet, sucking gasp of a drowning man.

"O2 sats dropping! Sixty-five percent!"

I spun toward Bay Two. The curtain was half-drawn, revealing a terrifying tableau. The patient, a middle-aged man from the pileup, was thrashing, his face turning a dusky violet. And standing over him, holding a central line kit with shaking hands, was Valentina Moreno.

She wasn't looking at the patient. She was staring at the monitor, her eyes wide and glassy, like a deer caught in high beams.

"Valentina, report," I barked, crossing the distance in two strides.

"I—I was placing the line," she stammered, her voice thin. "But the resistance… I think I hit something."

I looked at the patient’s chest. The right side wasn't moving. The trachea was deviated sharply to the left.

"You dropped his lung," I said, the diagnosis hitting me like a physical blow. Tension pneumothorax. He had seconds before his heart stopped from the pressure.

Valentina just blinked, the needle still in her hand, hovering uselessly over his clavicle. "I just need to find the vein—"

"Move!" I didn't wait for her to process. I shoved her shoulder, hard enough to send her stumbling back into the crash cart.

"Scalpel. Chest tube kit. Now!" I shouted to the nurse, grabbing a 14-gauge angiocath from the tray. There wasn't time for the tube yet. I located the second intercostal space, mid-clavicular line, and drove the needle in.

A sharp hiss of escaping air filled the small bay—the sound of death retreating. The man’s chest heaved, sucking in a desperate, ragged breath. His color began to shift from purple back to pale pink.

My own heart hammered against my ribs, a stark contrast to the steady beep returning to the monitor. I looked up. Valentina was pressed against the wall, her hands clutching the hem of her scrubs, her face pale. She wasn't looking at the patient she’d almost killed. She was looking at the door, checking to see who had watched her fail.

***

The silence in my office was heavy, broken only by the relentless drumming of rain against the windowpane. On my desk sat Valentina’s fellowship application. It was thick, printed on expensive bond paper, a stark contrast to the flimsy incident report I’d just stapled to the back of it.

I picked up my red pen. *Denied.*

The door swung open without a knock.

Colton walked in, bringing the scent of expensive cologne and ozone with him. He looked perfect, as always—hair swept back, white coat tailored to accentuate his shoulders. He smiled, that dazzling, camera-ready smile that had charmed me five years ago, but it didn't reach his eyes today.

He closed the blinds behind him, plunging the room into gray shadow.

"Rough shift?" he asked, leaning against the edge of my desk. He picked up the framed photo of us from our engagement party, turning it over in his hands.

"Valentina punctured a lung, Colton. A tension pneumo on a stable patient. She froze."

He sighed, putting the photo down face-up. "Intern nerves, Claire. We’ve all been there. Remember your first central line?"

"I didn't almost kill a man and then worry about who saw me do it," I said, my voice tight. I tapped the file. "I’m rejecting her for the Trauma Fellowship. She’s dangerous."

The air in the room shifted. The temperature seemed to drop ten degrees. Colton pushed off the desk, his body language shifting from casual to looming.

"That’s a bit extreme, don't you think?" His voice was low, smooth, but there was a jagged edge beneath it. "Val is family. Her uncle Richard is the reason we got the new MRI suite. The reason *I* got the grant for my research."

"This isn't about politics. It’s about patient safety. She lacks the instinct, and worse, she lacks the humility to learn."

Colton walked around the desk, stopping behind my chair. He placed his hands on my shoulders, his thumbs digging into the muscle near my neck. It should have felt comforting. Instead, it felt like a restraint.

"You’re so rigid, Claire. It’s your one flaw," he whispered near my ear. "This isn't just about her. It’s about us. About our future. You deny her, you embarrass me. You embarrass the Snyders."

I stiffened, pulling away from his touch. "Since when does your reputation depend on an incompetent intern?"

He straightened, his handsome face hardening into a mask of cold indifference. The warmth was gone, replaced by the entitlement of a man who had never been told *no*.

"Loyalty matters more than skill in this family, Claire," he said, his voice flat. "You’d do well to remember that before you file that paperwork."

He turned and walked out, leaving the door wide open. I looked down at my hand. It was trembling, just slightly. I reached for my stethoscope, wrapping my fingers around the cold metal, grounding myself.

***

My appetite was gone, but the headache pounding behind my eyes demanded caffeine. The cafeteria was a dull roar of conversation and clattering trays. I kept my head down, navigating toward the coffee station, until a shrill, weeping voice cut through the noise.

"...I don't know what I did to make her hate me!"

I froze. Three tables away, Valentina was holding court with a group of first-year residents. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her posture shrunken and fragile. She looked nothing like the arrogant girl who had nearly killed a man two hours ago.

"She’s just… she’s jealous," Valentina sobbed, loud enough for half the room to hear. "Because Colton and I grew up together. She thinks… she thinks I’m trying to steal him."

A resident I recognized patted Valentina’s arm sympathetically. "That’s insane. Dr. Phillips is the Chief Resident."

Valentina sniffled, dabbing her eyes with a napkin. She leaned in, dropping her voice to a stage whisper that carried perfectly in the sudden lull. "It’s not just that. I saw her talking to that rep from PharmaCore. The one with the new clotting agent? Suddenly she’s rejecting my application and pushing for the guy who uses their products exclusively. You do the math."

The silence that followed was suffocating. Heads turned. Eyes that usually held respect now narrowed with suspicion. The accusation hung in the air, toxic and sticky.

I stood there, gripping my empty coffee cup until the cardboard crumpled. The betrayal wasn't a sharp knife; it was a slow-acting poison. Valentina wasn't just incompetent; she was a predator. And Colton—my fiancé, the man I was supposed to build a life with—had let her off the leash.

Outside the panoramic windows, the sky turned a bruised, angry purple. The storm warnings had been scrolling on the TVs all morning, but as I looked around the cafeteria, seeing the shifting alliances in the faces of my colleagues, I realized the real storm was already inside.

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