
After My Groom Defended the Woman Who Almost Killed Me
Chapter 3
Consciousness returned not as a sunrise, but as a collision.
The first thing I registered was the rhythmic *beep-hiss* of a ventilator somewhere down the hall. The second was the cage. My left leg was elevated, encased in a halo of stainless steel pins and carbon fiber rods—an external fixator drilled directly into my tibia. The pain was a living thing, a hot, serrated edge sawing through the nerve block.
I blinked against the harsh fluorescent glare. I wasn't alone.
Colton stood at the foot of the bed. He wasn't wearing his white coat, just a bespoke charcoal suit that cost more than my first car. There were no flowers on the bedside table. Just a clipboard resting in his manicured hands.
"You're awake," he said. No relief in his voice. Just an observation.
"The hiker," I rasped. My throat felt like it was lined with sandpaper. "The one with the arterial bleed."
Colton’s jaw tightened. He tapped the pen against the clipboard. *Click. Click. Click.* "He didn't make it to the helipad, Claire. Hypovolemic shock."
Nausea rolled in my gut, heavy and cold. "Valentina couldn't find the clamp."
"Valentina was traumatized," he corrected smoothly, walking to the side of the bed. He loomed over me, blocking the light. "She was witnessing a disaster. A disaster where her Chief Resident was screaming incoherently."
I tried to sit up, but the room spun. "I was directing the medic. I was saving a life while you were busy cuddling an intern."
"You were delirious with pain." He dropped the clipboard onto my chest. It hit my sternum with a dull thud. "The Board needs an explanation for the fatality. I've drafted one that protects everyone."
I looked down. The text swam, but phrases jumped out at me like jagged rocks. *...Lead Surgeon Claire Phillips... compromised judgment due to injury... failure to transfer command...*
"You want me to take the fall," I whispered, the realization chilling my blood faster than the IV fluids. "She killed him, Colton. She froze."
"She has a future," he hissed, leaning down until I could smell the peppermint on his breath. "You? Look at your leg, Claire. You’re looking at six months of rehab. Maybe a year. You won't be standing at an OR table anytime soon. Sign the report. Admit that your injury caused the delay. I’ll make sure the hospital gives you a generous severance. A quiet retirement."
My hand trembled, not from fear, but from a rage so pure it nearly blinded me. He wasn't just asking me to lie; he was asking me to bury my integrity in the same grave as that hiker. To become the shield for his incompetence.
I gathered the saliva in my dry mouth. When he leaned closer to intimidate me, I spat in his face.
Colton recoiled, wiping his cheek with a look of absolute revulsion.
"Get out," I said, my voice low and lethal. "Get out before I scream for security."
***
Getting into my apartment three days later was a war of attrition. The wheelchair tires caught on the threshold; my crutches clattered against the doorframe. When I finally pushed the door open, the silence that greeted me was wrong.
It wasn't empty. It was hollowed out.
My bookshelf was overturned. Cushions were slashed open, stuffing bleeding onto the hardwood. My desk drawers had been pulled out and dumped. It looked like a hurricane had been contained within these four walls.
My phone buzzed in my lap. An email notification from the Medical Board.
*Subject: NOTICE OF IMMEDIATE SUSPENSION.*
I tapped it open, my heart hammering against my ribs. The words blurred through tears of frustration. *...pending investigation into allegations of substance abuse... erratic behavior during rescue operations... gross negligence...*
They hadn't just filed a report. They had nuked my life. Colton and Valentina had gone to the police. They were claiming I was high. That I was the danger.
A sharp knock at the open door made me jump. I spun the wheelchair around, gripping a heavy glass vase from the entry table as a weapon.
A man stood in the doorway. He wore a rumpled trench coat damp with Seattle rain, his dark hair cropped short. He held up a badge, but he didn't look like a cop. He looked tired.
"Dr. Phillips?" his voice was deep, gravelly. "Isaiah Freeman. State Medical Board. I need to ask you a few questions."
"Get out," I snapped, raising the vase. "I've had enough of your people. Did Colton send you to plant more evidence?"
Isaiah didn't flinch at the makeshift weapon. He stepped inside, closing the door gently behind him. He looked at the chaos of my apartment—the slashed cushions, the overturned books—and his jaw muscles bunched.
"Colton Snyder didn't send me," he said, walking slowly toward me, hands visible and empty. "I requested this file."
"Why? So you can fast-track my revocation?"
He stopped three feet away. He reached into his coat pocket. I tensed, ready to throw the glass, but he only pulled out a folded piece of paper. He set it on the table between us.
"This is the narcotics log Colton submitted to the police," Isaiah said softly. "It claims you signed out Oxycodone three hours before the flight. But I checked the digital timestamps on the Pyxis machine. You were in surgery then. You couldn't have signed it."
My grip on the vase loosened. I looked up at him, really looked at him. The last time I’d seen those dark, intense eyes, we were fourteen, sitting on the roof of a group home, watching the city burn with sunset.
"You..." I breathed.
"I know you didn't do this, Claire," Isaiah said. The professional mask slipped, revealing a fierce, terrifying intensity beneath. "I remember who you are. And I'm not going to let them bury you."
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