LOGINSpencer POV
I almost took the highway.
I should have taken the highway. The highway was faster, better lit, and didn't require the specific kind of attention that the mountain roads demanded in rain like this. But I'd driven the highway home four hundred times and my brain had started finishing the route without me, leaving my conscious mind alone in the dark with a sixteen-year-old boy's chart and the particular sound a waiting room makes when everything has already gone wrong.
The mountain road required both hands and focus. That was the only reason I took it.
Ten Years in emergency medicine and I still hasn't found the off switch. Sage said I was married to the Job, usually with the specific energy of someone who had decided your life was her personal renovation project. She wasn't wrong, she was almost never wrong, which was its own kind of exhausting.
But saving lives was clean and straightforward. You either did it or you didn't, and the options were medical, not emotional and I was good with medical options in a way I had proven expensively, in the form of divorce papers three years ago that I was not good with emotional ones.
Ella had said "you're more present with strangers dying than you are with me."
And I hadn't argue, that had been the problem.
I drove carefully, with both hands, full attention on the wet road ahead. Rain like this turned mountain curves into dangerous suggestions. I'd seen what happened when people forgot that, I'd treated what happened when people forgot that, and I had no interest in becoming my own patient.
The headlights appeared lower on the road, maybe two curves ahead. It was a smaller car, moving faster than the conditions needed, I eased off the accelerator and watched. I felt something in my chest, the same thing I felt whenever things were about to go sideways.
I'd learned to trust that feeling. Then I saw the second vehicle.
It had been sitting on the roadside, and it pulled out behind the smaller car with a purpose that had nothing casual in it. It closed the distance too fast. My foot was already coming off the accelerator when it hit her.
It accelerated and made contact, full deliberate force into her rear bumper, and I said something out loud in my empty car that I will not repeat.
The smaller car fishtailed and caught itself. The second hit came at an angle, harder, more calculated, and this time the guardrail met the car at the weak join and gave like it was made of something cheaper than metal, and then the car was gone, over the edge, into the dark below, and I was already braking, already pulling over, already out of the car before I'd made any decision about any of it.
I reached for my phone and emergency kit.i called 911 while I ran the embankment, gave my location and what I'd seen, the deliberate impact, hit and run, vehicle heading back toward the city and the operator told me to wait for emergency services. I told her I was an ER doctor and kept moving.
The embankment was steep and wet and didn't care. I went down hard on my hands twice, opened my palm on something sharp and kept going. The car had hit the river forty feet below, I could see the shape of it, headlights still cutting weakly through the murk before the water claimed them entirely. It was sinking and inside, barely visible through the fractured windshield was movement.
I didn't think about the temperature when I hit the water, it would've made me slower.
The cold went straight through the skin and muscle and organs. I surfaced, found the car and swam against the current with everything I had left after a fourteen-hour shift, which turned out to be barely enough.
The driver's side was folded inward at an angle that wasn't opening for anyone. I could see her through the intact window, she was young, with brunette hair suspended in the water filing the cabin, she had a head wound at her left temple already bleeding pink into the food. Her eyes were half-open. The water was at her neck.
I found a rock and turned my face away and put my elbow through the window with everything I had. The glass gave way. I reached in, ignored the edges, found the seatbelt release, felt it click and pulled her through with controlled urgency.
She wasn't breathing when I got her to the bank. I began CPR, thirty compressions, I'd done this enough times that my body knew the sequence the way it knew how to walk.
She coughed. Water came out of her and she gasped like her body had remembered at the last possible second that it wasn't done yet. I kept my hands on her shoulder and checked her pulse, she was alive.
I heard sirens in the distance. I looked up at the road, the vehicle that hit her was gone, and drove away.
I looked back down at the woman breathing shallowly in the wet scrub beside me.
St. Benedicts was twelve minutes from here, if she was in a hospital database, she was findable.
If she was findable, whoever had just driven away at a measured, unbothered speed would find her.
My phone buzzed, it was Sage's name on the screen because of course it was, because Sage called at the exact wrong moment.
I declined it and then picked the woman up, got her weight distributed across my arms, and carried her toward my car.
My private clinic was twenty minutes east. Off-system, off-record, staffed tonight by a nurse I trusted with my own life because I'd had occasion to test that trust and she hadn't failed it. The woman in my arms was breathing, she had a head wound and probable internal bruising and a body temperature that needed addressing in the next thirty minutes.
She also had someone who had tried to kill her tonight and driven away like they intended to try again.
The ambulance could have the accident report. They could have the guardrail and the tire marks and the rain-soaked embankment.
She was coming with me.
Scarlett's POV "Talk me through what you're seeing."Silence from the observation gallery above. The kind that meant the residents up there was deciding between answering wrong or not answering at all. I kept my hands exactly where they were, the mitral valve exposed, posterior leaflet repairs, annulus reshaped and holding, and waited with the patience of someone who had learned that silence was its own kind of pressure."The.... the repair looks symmetrical," a voice finally said. A female in her third year. The one who'd spent the last two hours taking notes instead of watching until I'd quietly pointed out that no exam would ever ask her to describe what a valve looked like from a gallery."Looks symmetrical," I said. "Or is symmetrical?""It is symmetrical." She said after a while. "The movement on both sides is matching which means the tension is even.""And why does it matter to you at 3 AM when this patient is back in your ICU and something feels wrong?""Because uneven tensio
Katrina's POV I stared at the ceiling for a long time after Spencer put the phone away.The headline was still burned into the back of my eyes. My name, the timestamp, Investigation Concludes. The specific horror of understanding that while I was drowning in that river, someone was already on the phone making sure the story was written before anyone went looking for a body.All in less than three hours. I'd been married to Nicholas for three years and his family had needed less than that to bury me."You've been staring at the ceiling for ten minutes." Spencer said."I think better that way." I turned my head toward him. "Someone actually ordered this. This wasn't rage. Someone planned it, paid for it and then made calls the second it was done.""Yes they did." He said flatly."The car that hit me," I said. "Did you see who was driving?""No. The rain was heavy, and no plates visible from my angle." He paused. "I was behind you both on the road. I saw the vehicle pull out and acceler
Katrina's POV The first thing I noticed was the ceiling.It was white and textured. I stared at it for what felt like a long time, processing it the way your brain processed simple things when it's rebooting from somewhere it was never supposed to go.The ceiling was white. I was breathing. I was alive. That landed a second later. I was actually alive. My left side felt like someone had taken a crowbar to my ribs, my head was an experiment in pain I hadn't consented to, and my throat felt like I'd swallowed the entire river rather than just most of it.I tried to sit up. The pain that exploded through my left side was so immediate and violent that I hissed. And a firm hand came to my shoulder."Easy." A male voice spoke. "You have three cracked ribs on the left side. Sitting up fast is going to be a no from your body for awhile."I turned my head. The man beside me was early thirties, and had a blank expression. He was sitting in a chair like someone who had been there for hours."Wh
Spencer POV Juliet Richard opened the clinic door at eleven fifty PM in surgical scrubs and an expression that said she'd been expecting something like this, which was fair, I'd never called her at midnight with good news. We had the kind of professional relationship built entirely on high-pressure situations and mutual silence afterward. She'd covered for me twice, and I'd covered for her once in a way that technically never happened. We were even."She's alive," I said, carrying the woman through the door. "I witnessed a deliberate hit and run. We need to be discrete."She stepped aside. "Come in."I carried her in and laid her on the examination table and Juliet was already moving. She checked the pupils first, then pulse, then started cutting through the wet clothing. I assisted where needed and stayed out of the way where not."What really happened?" Juliet asked."It was at the mountain road." I replied. "Someone ran her off deliberately through the guardrail into the river and
Spencer POV I almost took the highway.I should have taken the highway. The highway was faster, better lit, and didn't require the specific kind of attention that the mountain roads demanded in rain like this. But I'd driven the highway home four hundred times and my brain had started finishing the route without me, leaving my conscious mind alone in the dark with a sixteen-year-old boy's chart and the particular sound a waiting room makes when everything has already gone wrong.The mountain road required both hands and focus. That was the only reason I took it.Ten Years in emergency medicine and I still hasn't found the off switch. Sage said I was married to the Job, usually with the specific energy of someone who had decided your life was her personal renovation project. She wasn't wrong, she was almost never wrong, which was its own kind of exhausting.But saving lives was clean and straightforward. You either did it or you didn't, and the options were medical, not emotional and
Katrina POVThe thing about having your life crushed at a dinner table is that nobody offers you a ride home after.I drove myself in the old Honda, the one they kindly allowed me to keep, which was funny. Three years and I got a 2019 Honda, five thousand dollars, and front-row seats to the most unhinged plot twist of my own life.It was 11 PM and it rained like the sky was also grieving. I drove with both hands locked on the wheel because if I didn't give them something to hold I honestly didn't know what I'd do with them. The mountains had swallowed the city behind me, nothing ahead but dark road, guardrails catching my headlights in pale flashes, and the kind of silence that pressed against your eardrums.The rain got heavier as the road climbed, and somehow the past came flooding in.He'd been standing at the canape table at a charity event looking at the food like it had personally offended him, I was in my second year of med school, nursing the same glass of wine for two hours b







