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CHAPTER 3

Author: Jackieketra
last update publish date: 2026-06-20 22:35:12

Three days after I signed my name under a stranger’s life, he was still alive.

That should have been the good news.

The bad news was that absolutely nothing about him made sense.

By Thursday night, Mercy General had gone back to pretending it was a normal hospital. People came in with chest pain, broken wrists, fevers, bad reactions to gas station sushi, and one man who insisted he had “lost” a condom inside his girlfriend like it had grown legs and walked off.

Normal.

Messy.

Human.

But up on the surgical ICU floor, in room 412, our unidentified John Doe was healing like his body had missed the mandatory staff meeting on medical reality.

I wasn’t assigned to him.

Technically.

In fact, I had been told twice by charge nurse Melissa that ICU patients were not my problem unless they came crashing back down to the ER.

So naturally, I checked on him every chance I got.

I told myself it was professional concern. I had signed the emergency authorization. I had been there when he crashed. It was normal to want updates.

That was a lie.

I wanted to know why the fingerprints around my wrist still warmed whenever I got too close to the elevators that led to his floor.

I wanted to know why the little cut on my finger had healed overnight without so much as a scab.

And I really wanted to know why a man who had been opened from ribs to hip after massive internal bleeding had needed less pain medication than a teenager with a sprained ankle.

At 1:43 a.m., I carried a stack of charts past the nurses’ station, waited until Melissa turned her back, then slipped into the staff elevator.

“Don’t judge me,” I told the security camera.

The camera judged me anyway.

Room 412 was at the end of a quiet hall where the lights were dim and the machines did most of the talking. ICU had a different kind of silence than the ER. Downstairs, chaos barked in your face. Up here, death sat politely in the corner and waited to see if anyone noticed.

I hated it.

I paused outside his door and checked the chart on the wall.

DOE, JOHN. MALE. UNKNOWN AGE. UNKNOWN HISTORY.

Everything about him was unknown.

Except to me.

I knew the exact weight of his hand around my wrist. I knew his eyes were the kind of blue that made a person feel watched even in memory. I knew his voice sounded like gravel and command when he whispered one word.

Run.

I pushed the door open.

The room smelled like antiseptic, plastic tubing, and something else beneath it.

Something warm.

Woodsy.

Like rain-soaked earth and smoke.

I stopped just inside.

“Nope,” I whispered. “Hospitals do not smell like sexy haunted forests.”

The man lay in bed with monitors attached to his chest, an IV in one arm, and a bandage wrapped around his torso. His long dark-blond hair had been cleaned and combed back, though it was already starting to dry in unruly waves against the pillow. Without blood covering half his face, he looked even more unfair.

Not pretty.

Pretty was too soft.

He was rough-edged and masculine in a way that irritated me personally. Sharp jaw. Straight nose. Dark stubble. Broad shoulders that made the hospital gown look like a napkin with ambition.

Even unconscious, he looked like someone who expected the world to move out of his way.

“Must be nice,” I muttered, walking closer. “Some of us have to say excuse me.”

His monitor beeped steadily.

Too steadily.

I picked up the chart from the bedside table and flipped through the latest notes.

Post-op day three.

Stable vitals.

No fever.

No signs of infection.

Drain output minimal.

Hemoglobin improving.

Inflammatory markers down.

Incision healing well.

I stared at the last line.

Healing well was what doctors wrote when a wound looked clean and behaved itself.

This man’s wound was not behaving itself.

I set the chart down and carefully lifted the edge of the abdominal dressing.

Then I forgot how to breathe.

Three days ago, Dr. Han had cut him open to save his life. I had seen the post-op notes. Exploratory laparotomy. Internal bleeding. Organ repair. Extensive trauma. The kind of surgery that left a body angry for weeks.

The incision should have been raw and swollen, held together by staples and medical hope.

Instead, the skin beneath the dressing had already sealed.

Not completely. Not perfectly. But enough that my brain rejected what my eyes were seeing.

The edges had knitted together into a clean, dark red line. The surrounding bruising had faded too much. The lacerations on his ribs looked days older than they were. The deep cut near his collarbone was almost closed.

I lowered the dressing back down slowly.

“Okay,” I whispered. “That’s new.”

Behind me, someone cleared her throat.

I jumped and nearly knocked over the IV pole.

Dr. Han stood in the doorway with a tablet in one hand and the exhausted expression of a woman who had not slept enough since medical school.

“Williams,” she said.

I straightened. “Dr. Han.”

“You’re not assigned to this floor.”

“I got lost.”

“In the same room three nights in a row?”

“Mercy General is basically a maze.”

Her mouth twitched, but she didn’t smile. “You saw it?”

I looked at the man in the bed. “If by it you mean the part where his body is healing like it made a private deal with God, then yes.”

Dr. Han stepped inside and shut the door behind her.

That got my attention.

Doctors didn’t shut doors for normal conversations.

She moved to the opposite side of the bed and checked his pupils with a penlight. He didn’t react.

“His vitals stabilized twelve hours after surgery,” she said quietly. “He should have needed more blood. He didn’t. His white count spiked, then normalized. His kidney function corrected. His liver enzymes dropped faster than possible. And the fractures in his ribs are already showing early repair.”

I folded my arms. “You’re saying that like I’m supposed to have a cute explanation.”

“I was hoping you did.”

“Me? I’m an ER nurse, not a witch.”

The second the word left my mouth, the room seemed to hold still.

Dr. Han looked at me.

I looked back.

“Bad joke,” I said.

“Maybe.”

The monitor beeped.

I rubbed my marked wrist without thinking.

Dr. Han’s eyes dropped to the movement. “Does it hurt?”

My hand stilled. “What?”

“Your wrist.”

“No.”

Another lie.

It didn’t hurt exactly. It burned sometimes. Warmed. Pulled. Like an invisible thread had been tied beneath my skin and someone on the other end kept testing the knot.

Dr. Han didn’t call me on it.

She looked back at the patient. “You were the one he spoke to before he crashed.”

My stomach tightened. “Yes.”

“What did he say?”

I had told Dr. Patel. I had told the trauma team. I had even written it in my personal note because nurses documented everything, including the creepy shit.

But saying it again still made my throat feel tight.

“He said, ‘Run.’”

Dr. Han’s face gave away nothing.

“What else?”

“Before that, something like, ‘Don’t let them.’”

“Them who?”

“If I knew that, I’d be sleeping better.”

She tapped something on her tablet. “He had no ID when he came in.”

“I know.”

“No fingerprints in the system. No dental match. Police still have nothing from the car.”

“That’s weird.”

“That’s not the only weird thing.”

I didn’t like the way she said that.

“What?”

She turned the tablet toward me.

His digital chart filled the screen. Same John Doe. Same trauma notes. Same unidentified status.

Then she tapped the emergency authorization tab.

A blank error page appeared.

I frowned. “Where’s the form?”

“That’s what I asked admin.”

“And?”

“They said it was scanned into the system.”

“But it’s not there.”

“No.”

“Maybe IT misplaced it.”

Dr. Han looked at me over the tablet. “A legal emergency authorization form connected to a major unidentified trauma patient disappeared from the hospital system less than forty-eight hours after it was scanned.”

I stared at the blank page.

My blood seemed to slow.

“Paper copy?”

“Missing from admin files.”

A sound left my mouth that wasn’t quite a laugh. “Of course it is.”

“You signed it.”

“Yes.”

“And initialed it.”

“Yes.”

“With a cut on your finger.”

My eyes snapped to hers.

She noticed.

Of course she noticed. Surgeons were terrifying like that. They could miss a lunch break but not a two-millimeter change in someone’s expression.

“Dr. Han,” I said carefully, “what exactly are you asking me?”

“I’m asking if anything unusual happened when you signed.”

The paper drinking my blood.

The ink shimmering.

The lights buzzing.

My wrist burning like I had been branded by a ghost.

“No,” I said.

Dr. Han’s eyes narrowed.

I lifted my chin. “If you want answers, ask Sleeping Beauty here. He’s the one doing medical miracles in cheap cotton.”

As if summoned by my mouth, the monitor changed.

One beep skipped.

Then another.

The man’s fingers twitched against the blanket.

Dr. Han moved instantly. “Mr. Doe?”

His body tensed.

Not slowly. Not like a patient waking from sedation.

Like a predator hearing a sound in the dark.

My heartbeat jumped.

His eyelids opened.

Blue eyes locked on mine.

The room vanished.

Not literally. I still heard the monitor. Still smelled antiseptic. Still saw Dr. Han at his bedside.

But the second he looked at me, everything else became background noise.

His eyes were brighter than I remembered. Sharp. Focused. Far too aware for a man who had been unconscious for three days and sliced open like a Thanksgiving turkey.

He stared at me like I was the answer to a question he hated.

Then his gaze dropped to my wrist.

His jaw tightened.

“You,” he rasped.

His voice rolled through the room, rough from disuse and still somehow full of command.

Dr. Han leaned over him. “Sir, you’re at Mercy General Hospital. You were in a serious accident. Can you tell us your name?”

He ignored her.

Rude.

Expected, but rude.

His eyes stayed on me. “How long?”

I swallowed. “Three days.”

Something dark moved across his expression.

“Fuck.”

Dr. Han blinked.

I pointed at him. “That’s what I said when your wounds started healing like they were late for work.”

His gaze sharpened.

Even half-dead in a hospital bed, the man had the nerve to look intimidating.

“You shouldn’t be here,” he said.

“I work here.”

“You should have run.”

“You said that already. It was dramatic the first time too.”

Dr. Han gave me a look that clearly said this was not the moment.

I ignored it because this man had haunted my sleep for three nights and I had questions.

“Who are you?” I asked.

His hand shifted toward the IV.

I slapped it away on instinct.

“Don’t even think about it.”

His eyes flashed.

Not metaphorically.

Actually flashed.

For one split second, something red moved behind the blue.

My entire body locked.

Dr. Han didn’t see it. She was checking the monitor.

Lucky her.

The man’s nostrils flared, and his gaze moved over me in a way that didn’t feel sexual exactly, but intimate. Too intimate. Like he was reading things I hadn’t said out loud.

“You signed,” he said.

The air left my lungs.

Dr. Han went still.

I forced my voice steady. “I signed an emergency authorization to keep you alive.”

His expression hardened. “With blood.”

My finger throbbed.

“I had a cut.”

He closed his eyes for one second, like that single sentence had ruined his whole damn year.

When he opened them again, they were colder.

“You don’t know what you did.”

“No, I don’t. Because everyone around here keeps speaking in horror-movie fragments instead of complete sentences.”

Dr. Han stepped in. “Sir, if you know something about your condition, your injuries, or the people who may have caused the accident, you need to tell us.”

He turned his head slightly and looked at her for the first time.

Dr. Han was not an easy woman to shake.

But under his stare, even she stopped breathing for half a second.

“Leave,” he said.

Her eyebrows rose. “Excuse me?”

“I need to speak with her.”

I laughed once. “Absolutely not.”

His gaze snapped back to me.

I lifted one hand. “First of all, I don’t take private meetings with unidentified men who growl in trauma bays and heal like cursed princes. Second, she is the doctor. Third, you are the patient. That means your scary bedroom voice does not run this room.”

Something flickered in his eyes.

Not amusement.

Close, maybe.

Then pain cut through his expression. His body jerked, and the monitor spiked.

Dr. Han moved quickly. “Heart rate up. He’s agitated.”

“No shit,” I said, stepping closer despite myself. “Sir, you need to calm down.”

He gripped the bedrail hard enough that the metal creaked.

Actually creaked.

My mouth went dry.

“Doors,” he rasped. “Lock them.”

Dr. Han reached for the call button.

His hand shot out and grabbed my wrist again.

Same wrist.

Same place.

Heat exploded beneath my skin.

I gasped.

The monitor steadied.

All at once.

The spike dropped. His breathing slowed. The tension in his body eased, though his fingers stayed wrapped around me.

Dr. Han stared at the monitor.

I stared at his hand.

He stared at me.

The warmth between us pulsed once, deep and terrifying.

“What the hell was that?” I whispered.

His thumb moved over the faint marks on my wrist. His touch should have felt invasive. Instead, it felt like something inside me recognized it before I gave permission.

That scared me more than the growling.

His voice dropped until it was almost too low to hear.

“They’ll come for you now.”

My stomach turned cold.

“Who?”

He didn’t answer.

His eyes shifted toward the room’s window, though the blinds were closed and the city outside was black with night.

Then he released me.

The warmth vanished so suddenly I almost reached after it.

Which was ridiculous.

I did not reach after strange men. I reached for coffee, trauma shears, and the last slice of pizza before Brenda got greedy.

The patient’s eyes began to close.

Dr. Han leaned over him. “Sir, stay with us. What is your name?”

His lashes lowered.

For a second, I thought he was gone again.

Then his mouth moved.

“One of mine will come.”

I stepped closer. “One of your what?”

His eyes opened just enough to pin me in place.

And there it was again.

That look.

Like he knew the punchline to a joke the universe had decided to play on me.

Like he knew exactly how badly my life had changed.

Like he was furious about it.

“Don’t trust anyone,” he whispered.

Then his eyes closed.

The monitor settled into a steady rhythm.

Dr. Han and I stood on either side of the bed, both of us quiet.

For once, I had nothing smart to say.

Then the lights above us flickered.

Once.

Twice.

Down the hall, a security alarm chirped and cut off.

Dr. Han looked toward the door.

I looked at the man in the bed.

My wrist burned beneath the shadow of his fingerprints.

And somewhere deep in Mercy General, something heavy slammed shut.

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