ログインFour years later…
The ER of Mont-Beaumont Medical Center pulsed like a living organism on the brink of panic.
Alarms wailed. Stretchers rolled in relentlessly. Doctors and nurses shouted over one another, each second pushing the staff closer to their breaking point.
A twenty-car collision on the main highway had turned a calm evening into a battlefield.
“Vitals dropping in Bay 3!”
“Intubate him—now!”
“We need three more units of blood—go!”
The metallic scent of blood seeped into every crevice of the emergency department, mingling with antiseptic and adrenaline. Medics burst through the sliding doors with yet another patient, their voices cracking from shouting over sirens.
“CODE CRIMSON! Blunt trauma, unresponsive, massive blood loss!”
The air shifted. Every medical staff member paused momentarily at the code shouted.
Code Crimson meant one thing: A life hanging by the last thread.
A veteran nurse rushed toward the incoming stretcher, glanced at the patient’s vitals, and paled.
“Her pressure’s crashing—we’re losing her!” She informed firmly. “Trauma Room 2!”Another nurse, a resident, sprinted toward the hallway, desperation sharpening her voice into a cry.
“PAGE MIRACLE HANDS! SHE’S THE ONLY ONE WHO CAN SAVE HER!”
The entire ER buzzed with renewed urgency, in agreement over that statement.
Miracle Hands.
It wasn’t just a nickname. It’s a lifeline.
The paramedics pushed the patient into Trauma Room 2.
“She was in the passenger seat! Her companion is being transported here as well!” one medic barked. He gripped one side as his companion counted for them to transfer the patient to the bed. “Car flipped—she got pinned! Tachycardic, hypotensive, fading fast!”
The patient groaned, barely conscious. Her face was smeared with blood and oil, hair tangled with glass shards. Two nurses cut through her clothes, revealing deep lacerations, contusions forming across her ribs and abdomen.
“She’s bleeding internally,” the trauma chief muttered grimly. “Prep the OR—we’re not stabilizing her here. It’s too risky.”
The patient’s head rolled to the side, exposing her face beneath the grime.
A resident gasped.
“Wait! Is that… Isabelle Valtieri?”
“No way. The donor foundation girl?”
“Oh my God!”
“She has been low-key for a long while!”
“That’s her. She’s in critical condition.”
Whispers scattered like wind—quick, sharp, startled—but dissolved instantly when the harsh crack of footsteps sliced through the chaos.
The double doors to Trauma Room 2 flew open.
And in walked the legend.
Dr. Althea Johnson moved like a blade through smoke.
Black scrubs with her white coat draped over her shoulders. Hair pulled into an immaculate twist. And her eyes, like sharpened sapphire glass.
She radiated control, precision, and authority.
The chaos bent around her.
“Report,” she commanded as she looked at the monitors in front of her.
The trauma chief didn’t miss a beat. “Female, late twenties. High-speed collision. Suspected splenic rupture, internal bleeding, and possible pelvic fractures.” He informed clearly. “BP unstable. We’ve got two units running, but she’s not responding.”
“OR?” Althea asked.
“Ready for immediate transfer.”
She nodded once.
As the team spoke, Althea checked the patient’s pupils, palpated the abdomen, and assessed the bruising pattern, calculating the speed to determine the likelihood of internal organ injury. Blood soaked the sheets beneath the patient, pooling faster than they could replace it.
She looked at the woman, just one look— and something flickered deep in her chest.
Recognition? Shock?
Perhaps some ghost of a memory.But her face never showed it.
To the staff, there was no visible connection. No tremor of familiarity. No personal ties.
Just a surgeon examining a stranger.
Yet Althea’s pulse tightened.
Isabelle.
The woman who once hid her escape… who once shielded her from danger… who once risked everything in silence. But no one in this hospital knew that.
Althea inhaled deeply, walling off every emotion.
Then her voice hit steel.
“She’s going to the OR now. Move.”
They raced down the hallway, pushing the gurney at a controlled sprint. Nurses cleared the path; orderlies held the elevator; anesthesiologists prepped meds on the run.
Inside the operating room, everything transformed.
The chaos of the ER gave way to a cold, sterile battlefield.
Machines beeped in a steady rhythm. Lights rose like halos above the table. A surgical nurse slid gloves onto Althea’s hands like she was arming a general when she entered after washing her hands thoroughly.
“Patient name?” someone asked.
“Isabelle Valtieri,” the trauma chief answered.
“Procedure?”
“Exploratory laparotomy.”
Althea’s eyes hardened.
“Let’s save her,” she said. She held out one hand. “Scalpel.”
Scalpel in hand, she made the midline incision with swift, practiced precision. Blood welled instantly.
“Suction,” Althea ordered.
The nurse obeyed, clearing the pooling blood.
“Her abdomen’s full. Suction can’t keep up.”
“Her spleen’s ruptured,” Althea said, already moving. “Get the clamps. We’re controlling the hilum.”
The team scrambled.
“BP’s dropping—60 over 30!” the anesthesiologist barked.
“Crank the O-negative to full speed!” Althea snapped.
Her hands moved in a blur—finding the rupture, identifying the source, isolating the vessel.
“There’s a tear along the lower pole, too!” a resident cried.
“I see it,” Althea said, looking at the resident sternly.
Clamps in place. Hemorrhage controlled.
“Spleen’s unsalvageable,” she announced. “We’re taking it out. Retractors.”
As the team widened the field, the bleed suddenly surged.
“She’s hemorrhaging again!” One nurse cried. “We’re losing pressure!”
“She’s fibrillating—no no no—”
The anesthesiologist shouted, “She’s coding!”
“No,” Althea said sharply. She all gave them a brief and firm look. “Not today.”
Most surgeons stiffened. Many froze. Some panicked.
Althea didn’t.
“Push epi. Get the paddles ready,” she commanded, voice steady as stone.
Suction whirred. Monitors screeched. Blood splattered across her gown, but she remained calm, her hands doing the work, her eyes concentrating on the patient.
“Clamp here,” she said calmly, guiding a resident’s trembling hands. “Good. Now there. Hold it steady. Don’t blink. Got it?”
The resident responded immediately.
She isolated the final bleeding vessel, fingers sure and swift, then cut, tied, and sealed it in a single seamless motion.
“She’s in V-fib!” the anesthesiologist warned. “Charging to 200!”
“Clear!”
The shock coursed through the patient’s body, lifting her off the table.
Nothing.
“Again!” Althea said.
“Charging—clear!”
Still flatline.
A nurse shook her head, whispering, “She’s slipping—”
“She’s not slipping anywhere,” Althea growled.
Her hands dove back into the surgical field. “Retractor. More pressure.” She said firmly. She can’t perfuse if she’s still bleeding.”
The trauma chief whispered, “Doctor, we’re almost out of—”
“Then get me more! Double-time!” she barked dryly. “We’ve got more, don’t we?!”
She clamped the last vessel, sealing it with perfect precision.
“BP rising,” the anesthesiologist breathed. “We have a pulse!”
A collective exhale filled the room. But they also know that they aren’t done.
“Check for secondary injuries,” Althea said. “Carefully.”
“No bowel perforation,” one resident confirmed.
“Diaphragm intact,” said another. “Liver has laceration, but minor—she’ll heal.”
Althea stitched layer after layer, her hands moving fast but with meticulous care.
Not a wasted movement.
Not a single hesitation.
The final suture slid into place like the closing stroke of a masterpiece.
“Vitals stabilized,” the anesthesiologist murmured, awe softening his voice. He looked at Althea in amazement. “She’s… she’s going to make it.”
Silence fell—a stunned, blessed silence.
Only then did Althea step back, blood-stained gloves trembling ever so slightly as she exhaled.
“Good work, team,” she said quietly. She looked at them, her eyes calm. “Now, who wants to close her up?”
The staff stared at her as though witnessing a miracle.
And they had.
Four hours later, Althea walked out of the OR, the exhaustion settling into her bones only after the danger passed. She stripped off her gloves, washed her hands, and leaned against the cool stainless-steel counter.
Her reflection stared back from the glass—calm but shadowed, the past momentarily bleeding into the present.
She had just saved a woman who once helped her escape hell.
But to the hospital, she was simply - Dr. Althea Johnson.
Miracle Hands. The enigmatic genius with surgical precision and no past.A nurse approached hesitantly.
“Doctor? Ms. Valtieri is stable. We’re transferring her to the ICU.”
Althea nodded as she looked at the chart the nurse handed her. “Good.” She simply stated as she returned the chart. “Make sure she’s monitored closely for the next twenty-four hours.”
“Yes, Doctor.” She answered. “Her family has also been informed.”
When the nurse left, Althea allowed her eyes to soften—just for a breath.
You survived, she thought silently. Maybe this time, fate is giving us another chance to set things right.
She turned away, the steel returning to her spine, the fire to her eyes.
She had no idea that saving Isabelle Valtieri would ignite the fuse that led straight back to the man she once loved—and the past she had buried.
But fate was already moving, and somewhere miles away,
Dominic Valtieri’s world was about to crack open.
Back in the main warehouse, the tide of the battle shifted. From the shadows between the stacked containers, a new unit emerged. The group moved in perfect sync, cutting through Luca’s forces with surgical precision.They weren’t Dominic’s.They weren’t Luca’s.They were something else entirely.“Who the hell—?” Roberto muttered before taking down an advancing enemy with a clean shot.Dominic saw them and watched the way they moved.He studied it intently until he finally recognized the pattern.His eyes narrowed.“No f8cking way.” He muttered under his breath.The fight raged for what felt like hours which could only have been minutes. Several bodies hit the concrete. Bullets started to run out, and knives came out when guns finally came empty.Dominic’s men were being pushed back since Luca’s forces were heavier, more numerous.“Sir, we’re losing ground!” One of the men called out, breath ragged.Dominic wiped blood from his brows, which does not belong to him.“Hold the line!” He b
The convoy rolled out without headlights. The engines are low and the tires drove through the service road in silence behind the old industrial district.The converted storage facility loomed ahead. The structure is windowless, silent, its corrugated metal skin reflecting the thin sliver of moonlight like a blade.Inside that building was the medical relay team that Althea supervises.Doctors. Field medics. Four nurses. A trauma tech.Civilians in the middle of a war they never asked for.Dominic swore to his wife that he is not going to lose them.He sat in the lead vehicle his eyes fixed on the structure as it grew larger with every meter. Beside him, Enzo adjusted the magazine in his weapon, making sure that he has several spares in his pockets and glanced over with a crooked grin.“You know,” Enzo said lightly, “for a ‘simple extraction’ discussed a while ago, you’ve brought half the arsenal.”Dominic didn’t look at him.“When I send you into danger, I don’t do it halfway.” He sco
Inside the lower study, the room filled quickly.The long table that had once served as Alessandro’s quiet planning space is again alive again. Maps are lit, screens, and the presence of men who had not stood together in the same room for years.Dominic stood at the head.Antonio to his right.Roberto beside him.Across the table, Ulysees, Enzo and now Vincent.The air carried weight and purpose.Dominic wasted no time. “Luca took one of our medical relays.” He started, voice steady but edged with controlled fury. “Staff alive. No casualties reported. He wants leverage. They’re my wife’s people and we must get them back.”There was no hesitation in the room.Vincent nodded once.“We will.”Roberto leaned forward, both hands on the table as he studied the layered map projected in front of them. He studied the roads, elevation, abandoned compounds, rural checkpoints, satellite overlays.“We need the holding point.” He announced.“Your uncle for sure will not use his main compound.” Ulys
The night inside Blackstone sharpened after the safehouse went dark.The estate seemed to draw a breath and hold it. Althea had noticed that every corridor became more alert, all lights are deliberate. The guards are moving with that heightened awareness that comes when a threat has stepped closer than comfort allows.Dominic stood in the central operations room, the darkened feed from the compromised relay still etched in his mind even after he had shut the screen off.Althea called it a night and told Dominic that she will be staying with Nicholas.“I’ll stay with Nicholas tonight.” She said in a low voice as she squeezed his hand gently. “If you can, please get some rest as well. You need it to clear your mind, Dom.”“I will.” He assured as he looked down at her carefully. He turned towards the others for a while and gave them a nod before ushering Althea out, accompanying her to Nico’s room. “Now, I want you to do the same thing, Thea. Get some rest.”Althea halted by his side.“I
The third move came that night that was silent, surgical, and far more intimate than any strike before.At exactly 2:17 a.m., one of Blackstone’s external safehouses, discreetly repurposed as a medical relay station under Althea’s oversight, went dark.There was no explosion or any gunfire.No screams echoing through the comms.Only silence.By the time the first response unit breached the perimeter, the facility was already stripped of life. Medical carts were abandoned mid-use, half-filled syringe lay on the floor while tablets showing charts were blinking in idle mode.But the facility is empty.Every doctor.Every nurse.Every orderly.Gone. Taken. Alive.And left behind, mounted neatly on the central station wall, was a single message burned into the digital monitor. “You built a sanctuary. I turned it into a cage.”*Dominic stood in the operations room, shoulders rigid, eyes locked on the surveillance playback loop. Beside him stood Althea, who is pale, still, but upright.Comp
The empire that Luca Valtieri inherited did not rise on noise.It rose on silence, on patience and on moves that no one saw until the results had already taken hold. It was built by Don Pietro Valtieri and one thing he had passed down to them is to have pieces to move that only one knows existed.And while Dominic gathered strength at Blackstone and Alessandro’s old network began to reawaken, Luca sat at the center of his own machine and began to move the pieces no one else even knew existed.The private war room beneath Luca’s compound glowed with a low, controlled light.Luca stood at the head of the central table and watched the rows of screens showed live feeds, financial dashboards, shipping routes, offshore accounts, and surveillance nodes that stretched across cities, ports, and borders. Nothing in Luca’s world was left unmeasured.Vittorio entered first, followed by Pablo Murdoch and two other senior advisors. A few seconds later, Aurelio walked in, the bruise on his jaw darke







