
Mother Seeks Revenge for Son
Chapter 2
The door closed behind Alexander and Dr. Matthews with a soft click that echoed like a gunshot in my ears. Ryan's monitors beeped steadily in the background, each sound a countdown to what I knew was coming. The nurses exchanged worried glances, their professional masks slipping to reveal the horror they felt at what had just happened.
"Mommy?" Ryan's small voice pulled me back. "Where did Daddy and the doctor go?"
I swallowed hard, forcing a smile. "They had to help someone else for a little while, sweetheart."
"But what about my special heart surgery?" His lower lip trembled as he clutched Rexy tighter.
The room began to close in around me. The familiar tightness gripped my chest—the prelude to the panic that had ended my surgical career. My hands started to tremble, and I could feel sweat beading on my forehead. Not now. Please, not now.
"Mrs. Hayes," a nurse—her name tag read Claire—touched my arm gently. "Ryan's stats are concerning. His pressure is dropping. We need to stabilize him until Dr. Matthews returns."
"If he returns," I whispered, the bitter truth slipping out before I could stop it.
I looked at the monitors. The numbers were dancing in front of my eyes, but three years of mothering a child with a heart condition had taught me enough. Ryan was deteriorating. Fast.
"Page another cardiac surgeon," I ordered, my voice stronger than I felt.
"We've tried," Claire replied, her voice dropping. "The closest available is at Harborview, at least forty minutes away."
Forty minutes. Ryan didn't have forty minutes.
Something cold and certain settled in my core, cutting through the panic. I had killed to save Alexander once. What wouldn't I do to save my son?
"My surgical kit is in my car," I heard myself say. "Lower level, Section C. Red Volvo. The keys are in my purse."
Claire's eyes widened. "Dr. Mitchell, you can't possibly—"
"He's my son." The words came out like steel. "And I was one of the best before..."
Before I killed a man. Before my hands refused to stop shaking. Before I sacrificed everything for a husband who was now sacrificing our son.
"Get my kit," I repeated. "And find me whoever you can—nurses with cardiac experience. I need to perform an emergency closure to stabilize him."
The minutes that followed passed in a blur. I scrubbed mechanically, the familiar ritual both comforting and terrifying. When Claire returned with my locked leather case, I stared at it like it contained both salvation and damnation.
The combination clicked under my fingers—Ryan's birthday. The instruments inside gleamed under the harsh OR lights, untouched for three years. I lifted a scalpel, and immediately my hand began to tremble. Flashes of that night—the kidnapper's face, the warm spray of blood, Alexander's horrified eyes—threatened to overwhelm me.
"Dr. Mitchell?" A young nurse stood ready, her eyes both frightened and trusting.
I closed my eyes. Inhaled deeply. Opened them again.
"I need 10 milligrams of propranolol," I said. The beta-blocker wouldn't stop my PTSD, but it might steady the physical tremors enough.
As the medication took effect, I looked down at my son. So small on the operating table. So trusting. I placed my hand on his chest, feeling the irregular flutter beneath my palm.
"I'm right here, Ryan," I whispered. "Mommy's going to fix your heart."
The first incision was the hardest. My hand shook, then steadied as muscle memory took over. Claire and another nurse, Mei, assisted silently, responding to my terse commands with professional efficiency. I worked mechanically, pushing back the darkness that hovered at the edges of my vision, focusing solely on the delicate tissues beneath my hands.
Every few minutes, I checked the monitors. Ryan's vitals were stabilizing, but still dangerously weak. I was buying time, nothing more.
"Dr. Mitchell," Mei's voice was soft but urgent. "He's waking up."
The anesthesia was wearing off. We couldn't risk more without an anesthesiologist present. I worked faster, my hands steadier than they had been in years, driven by a mother's desperate love.
As I placed the final suture, Ryan's eyes fluttered open, glazed with medication and pain.
"Mommy?" His voice was barely a whisper. "It hurts."
"I know, baby. I know." Tears blurred my vision as I stripped off my gloves and took his small hand in mine.
"Where's Daddy?" Ryan's eyes searched the room, his breathing becoming more labored. "I want Daddy."
The monitors began to wail as his oxygen levels plummeted. Claire rushed forward with an oxygen mask while Mei adjusted his medication.
"Call his father again," I ordered, my voice breaking. "Tell him to get back here now."
But as Ryan's eyes fixed on mine, growing dimmer by the second, I knew with terrible certainty that Alexander wouldn't make it in time. And as my son's lips formed his next words, I felt something inside me shatter beyond repair.
"Why didn't Daddy come?"
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