INICIAR SESIÓN
Estina
Go to New York, they said.
Men shouted and screamed, raising fists while nurses and EMTs did their best to keep them on gurneys.
Go to New York and practice medicine. It'll do wonders for your career.
I winced as another patient being wheeled down the corridor swung a punch at the security officer. He missed the man's face because the guy ducked just in time. Instead, the bloody-faced man's fist smashed into the wall. More blood dripped. But that didn't stop him. Cursing in Russian, he lunged off the gurney—either oblivious to his shredded and wounded leg or not caring about it—to tackle the hospital's rent-a-cop.
"We need some help here!"
I flinched at my colleague's shout as he brushed past me. Dr. Fidelis Harroun was supposed to be this hospital's best ER doctor. Right now, as he rushed into the melee, his face stern with disapproval, he sounded and looked more like an unhappy referee, charging forward to break up a fight and stick players in a penalty box.
"Just has to be a full moon," Fatima growled as she hurried forward from my other side. Shaking her head, the charge nurse cursed and swung her long, dark ponytail back as she joined Fidelis in breaking up the fight.
Full moon?
I wasn't prone to falling for superstitions. Chaos in the emergency room wasn't too out of the ordinary. But a full-out war like this in the trauma bay was something else. Not caused by the damn moon.
Whatever this chaos was, it was enough to keep me rooted in place for a millisecond, too stunned to blink or react to the commotion and violence. People came here to be helped. To be treated and sewn back up and saved.
I was here to help and save. To do my part and help others reclaim the best state of well-being they could have. I was specifically here in New York at this particular hospital because it seemed like the wisest career move I could make with my background. A background with a stellar record and many successes. A background that I only had due to all the hard years of working my ass off and studying so much.
All for this?
As I grasped it all and took in the scene of suited men shouting, threatening, and still attacking each other, I seriously had my second thoughts about coming here like my parents and colleagues back home in the UK had encouraged me to for years.
Only ten minutes ago, it was calm. I could've even said it was the dreaded Q-word, the one no medical professional ever utters out loud in fear of jinxing it. That was a superstition I would believe in because it always rang true. The second someone said things were quiet, all hell would break loose. The warzone taking over the floor had to be the karmic result of someone screaming that it was quiet.
Choking on the spot wasn't what I was trained to do. Freezing and trying to comprehend how quickly the neat and tidy emergency floor could've been reduced to this wasn't improving a single thing.
I blinked once more, watching Fatima rush forward to help a man who looked like he'd taken a gunshot to his shoulder as he tried to pull out his gun and aim it at another man.
"Oh, bloody hell." No one would hear me muttering, but seeing my steadfast and dependable charge nurse in the line of danger pushed me right out of shock. I snapped into action, running forward to assist her.
"Easy, easy." I joined Fatima, putting my hands out to steady the man on his gurney and stop him from reaching for his weapon. "Relax, sir."
He screwed up his face, turning to snarl at me and shout. His expression was menacing, warning me enough. His tone was heated and violent. But I couldn't understand a single word he was saying.
"Relax," I repeated, moving with the EMTs and Fatima. Fidelis and others were busy with others. Cops and security guards were mixed in the crowding trauma bay and lobby. All hands on deck. Whatever had happened was pulling out all efforts from each of us on the floor.
"You might be better off sedating him," the burly EMT said as he continued wheeling the patient with the gunshot wound further into the emergency room.
Adrenaline ran high. My pulse kicked up. All senses were alerted and I was focused and in the zone to move it and help return to that orderliness due this location of medical emergencies.
"What happened?" I asked, running alongside the gurney as we all pushed. The man was most intent on reaching for his gun, something the EMT prevented. But it was clear one of the Italian-speaking men on the other side of the room was the target of his ire.
"Bomb went off," the EMT replied, furrowing his brow as the radio piece on his shoulder went off with more chatter. "Half these Russian morons were inside while those Italian dudes were running out of the place. Then once they were on the street, they had to start fighting on top of it all." He glanced back, as if searching out his coworkers.
"Were any civilians hit?" Fatima asked.
Civilians? I cut her a sharp glance as we wheeled the bleeding man into an opening spot down the hall. A curtain wouldn't allow any bullet-proof protection, but we were cramped for vacancies.
"Yeah. They're coming in too," the EMT replied.
Civilians? I got hung up on Fatima's wording as I began to listen to the man's lungs. She made it sound like this man wasn't an ordinary New Yorker. A cop? A...
Oh, bloody hell...
A criminal? Fugitive? My mind was at the risk of running with too many questions and thoughts about these violent men sweeping into the emergency department and clogging the hallways and rooms with too many people—angry and wounded individuals. But I couldn't let my imagination run from me. It was time to concentrate, to focus and lock down on delivering the best assessment and care that I could.
EstinaI had the best of everything a child could want. I was granted the security to study without any other responsibilities holding me back. My father was a judge, my mother, a professor. I did come from an elite background, but I imagined my pride and properness would need to adapt as I learned how to live without my family."I wasn't spoiled," I replied with a little more heat than I intended to. "But I am unsurprised with your assessment of me.""See? You even talk fancy."I rolled my eyes and she smiled wider."But these men from last night," I asked, focusing my curiosity on the present. "And the ones still here."She nodded. "What about them?""Are they really criminals?" I asked."Yeah. Don't quote me, but the Russians are from one of those Bratvas. The others are from an Italian Mob family." She shrugged. "But hey, it's nothing scary. Mind your business, don't ask too many questions, and just treat the patients.""I'm not scared," I admitted, glad I had her as a coworker to
EstinaMany of the patients who'd come in after that explosion at the restaurant were still at the hospital the following day. Burn victims would be lingering under intensive care for a while. Several stubborn men left against medical advice, though.Fatima shrugged at the nurses' station as we caught up on patients and what would need to be done next, which tests and diagnostics were necessary to follow up with. "Hey, I won't cry when people like that wanna get out of here." She huffed with the specific exhaustion and annoyance only long-serving veteran nurses could earn. "I'd be handing out AMAs like they were Halloween candy."I shot her a look that I hoped conveyed a mixture of patience, amusement, sympathy, and mild consternation. All of us, from the LPNs and nurses at the lower range all the way to the attendings and residents, were expected to provide care without judgment. Yet, like what I'd witnessed and experienced last night, some individuals were just that much harder to h
AnatoliI seldom gave a shit what others thought of me. Every plan I made revolved around how it would impact my businesses and further strengthen my forces.Masha didn't apply to any of that. She couldn't fit in with any part of my world. Any chance of our even forming a father-daughter bond was over with. With how she had been conditioned to hate me from the Volkovs, I didn't even give a fuck about her coming here.It was callous but true.I heaved out another deep exhale. "I just don't give a fuck," I muttered. I had too many other things to concentrate on."You don't give a fuck about what?" Gunsyn asked as he strode into my office, catching the tail end of my remark. He moved quickly and with ease, showing that natural athleticism he had, proving he'd never lose that confidence I'd taught him to always show.Tall, strong, and proud, he was my right-hand man. My lethal and calculating killer who never failed to put family first.I gave a fuck about him. I always would. Alongside m
AnatoliThe call ended with a definitive click.Receiving the news that my daughter would be returning to me marked the end of an era. The end of an arrangement with my estranged child calling Moscow her home. Sixteen years had come and gone, and now she would come "home" to me.Fuck.I shook my head slowly, my mind numb and hesitant. Adjusting was imperative in my line of work. Usually, I could roll with the punches.But this?I grimaced, unsettled with this change.Masha was coming here, to my turf, my rule, my kingdom.It just didn't sit right with me. I couldn't see it going well.Fuck it all.While the anticipation of her arrival in New York City where I reigned as the boss of the Marcelli Family should've felt like a new beginning, my enthusiasm was slow to come.Idle and vacant, I sat at my desk, staring at the opposite wall as I let the news sink in. No excitement came with the prospect of my absent teenage daughter returning to me. This state-of-the-art building in the center
EstinaBehind me, Fidelis's booming voice came out over the din of men shouting, nurses and techs urging patients to behave, and cops questioning whoever they could.From this man to the next, I moved with such haste that the shift passed in a blur. I was all over, calling out orders, asking for cooperation, and trying to assess the most emergent cases of gunshot wounds, open lacerations from the explosion, concussions, and broken bones."Get him to a CT, stat," I told a nurse as I backpedaled out of a room, peeling off my gloves only to go to another room and put on a fresh pair to assess another patient. I furrowed my brow, certain that this argumentative and hostile man lying there bleeding from his face and chest would have just as much, if not more, internal injuries with how close he seemed to have been near the explosion in the restaurant.Before I could turn and face forward down the hall, though, someone knocked into me and sent me crashing to the floor.I landed with a deep
EstinaGo to New York, they said.Men shouted and screamed, raising fists while nurses and EMTs did their best to keep them on gurneys.Go to New York and practice medicine. It'll do wonders for your career.I winced as another patient being wheeled down the corridor swung a punch at the security officer. He missed the man's face because the guy ducked just in time. Instead, the bloody-faced man's fist smashed into the wall. More blood dripped. But that didn't stop him. Cursing in Russian, he lunged off the gurney—either oblivious to his shredded and wounded leg or not caring about it—to tackle the hospital's rent-a-cop."We need some help here!"I flinched at my colleague's shout as he brushed past me. Dr. Fidelis Harroun was supposed to be this hospital's best ER doctor. Right now, as he rushed into the melee, his face stern with disapproval, he sounded and looked more like an unhappy referee, charging forward to break up a fight and stick players in a penalty box."Just has to be a







