The state police officer is demanding to see the patient.

He’s saying it’s a homicide investigation and he has the authority to override medical holds.

The administrator is where’s Dr.

Webb? Still in his office.

He’s on the phone with the hospital’s legal counsel.

Good.

Ava moved past her toward the front.

I’ll handle it.

Ava, you’re a nurse.

You can’t.

I know what I can’t do, Ava said, not slowing.

I also know what I can.

Garrett was standing at the front desk with his ID out, and his voice at a volume designed to make everyone in earshot understand that he was not going to be patient much longer.

He was exactly what Ror had described, big, authoritative, with the specific energy of a man who was used to being the most dangerous person in any room he entered.

He had not counted on Ava.

She came up beside the administrator and addressed Garrett directly, calmly with zero apology in her voice.

I’m nurse Chen.

I’m managing care for the patient you’re asking about.

I need to inform you that he is currently in a monitored hold pending imaging review and is not available for interview.

Garrett looked at her.

He looked at her the way men like him [clears throat] sometimes look at small women who step into their path with a dismissal that was so automatic it was almost unconscious.

I’m a state police officer on a homicide investigation.

He said I don’t need your permission.

You need the attending physician’s clearance.

Ava said, which means you need Dr.

Webb, who is currently consulting with legal counsel.

You’re welcome to wait.

How long? I can’t say.

That’s not acceptable.

I understand, she said.

I’m sorry for the inconvenience.

He leaned slightly forward.

Not a threat exactly, an implication of one.

I’m going to need your name and your employee ID number.

Ava Chen, she said.

I don’t have my ID badge on me at the moment.

I can get it for you.

Please do that.

She turned as if she were going to retrieve it.

And as she turned, she glanced at the clock on the wall behind the front desk.

12:53 a.

m.

7 minutes.

She went to the supply corridor, stood with her back against the wall, and breathed.

She had bought some time, not a lot.

Garrett would push harder in the next few minutes.

And when he did, Webb’s legal hold argument would only hold so long before the hospital’s lawyers started calculating liability and told Webb to stand down.

She needed whoever was coming to arrive before that calculation was made.

Her phone vibrated.

In the building, side entrance, need you.

She pushed off the wall and moved.

10:02 a.

m.

The side entrance of Bay Ridge Memorial opened onto a service corridor that ran along the east wing, used by maintenance, by dietary, by anyone who needed to move through the hospital without going through the main lobby.

The lights were fluorescent and unflattering, and nobody was in the corridor when Ava pushed through the door.

Nobody except the man standing just inside it.

She recognized him immediately even though she had not seen him in 4 years and the recognition hit her in the chest with a force she had not prepared for.

Marcus Doyle was 54 years old, compact and still fit in the way of men who could not stop moving even when they tried with [snorts] a face that had accumulated more lines than she remembered and eyes that had not changed at all.

He was wearing civilian clothes, jeans, a dark jacket, and he was holding a federal badge in his left hand and looking at her with an expression she could not fully read.

“Ava,” he said.

“Marcus,” she said.

They stood there for a beat that was longer than either of them had intended.

“You look the same,” he said.

“You don’t,” she said.

“What’s happening? Give me everything right now.

” He put the badge away.

Ror called this in before the crash.

He had 30 minutes of warning that something was wrong with the route.

Not enough to abort.

Enough to make one call.

That call came to me.

He paused.

I’ve been driving for 2 hours.

Garrett is at the front desk.

I know he’s going to get past the hold eventually.

He’s not going to get the chance, Doyle said.

He reached into his jacket and produced a folded document.

She recognized the federal letter head from a distance.

Provisional federal protective custody.

It needs to be served to the attending physician.

Once it is, Garrett has no legal access to the patient and the hospital’s cooperation is mandatory.

Web, she said immediately.

Give it to me.

I’ll take it to Web.

Doyle handed it over without hesitation.

There’s something else.

She looked at him.

The man who entered the medication order, he said, “We ran the access code against federal records in the car.

” “It’s not just hospital administration access.

It’s a code that was issued 3 years ago as part of a DoD contractor liaison program.

” He met her eyes.

Richard Harland is not just a hospital CEO.

He’s been a registered DoD contractor point of contact since 2021.

and the program he’s registered under is the same program ROR’s task force has been investigating.

She felt the pieces locked together with a particular clarity that only came when something you had suspected turned out to be exactly as bad as you feared.

He’s not a middleman, she said.

No, said Doyle.

He’s the architect.

She folded the protective custody document and tucked it into her scrub pocket.

I need to get this to Web before Garrett figures out what’s happening.

Go, Doyle said.

I’ll handle the lobby.

She was already moving.

10:09 a.

m.

[clears throat] Webb read the document once quickly, then again more slowly.

Then he set it on the desk and looked up at Ava with the expression of a man who had thought he understood the scope of his evening and now understood that he had been significantly wrong.

This makes Ror a federal protected witness.

He said yes.

Which means everything that has happened in this hospital tonight, the medication order, the access code, the audit log suppression request is now part of a federal record.

Yes.

And Richard Harlon is the subject of a federal investigation, Ava said, as of tonight.

Webb was quiet for a long moment.

He picked up the document again, held it, set it back down.

I’ve worked in this hospital for 22 years, he said.

I have eaten lunch with that man.

I have attended his fundraisers.

I have believed.

He stopped, started again.

I believed he cared about this institution.

Ava said nothing.

There was nothing to say to that.

The vial, Webb said finally, still in your drawer.

I need to call the state lab directly, not through the hospital system.

He was already reaching for his personal phone and the audit log.

Doyle will want that routed to the federal team directly.

Doyle, he looked at her.

That’s who you texted.

Yes.

He nodded slowly.

You’re going to have to tell me everything eventually.

Eventually, she said right now I need to get back to Ror.

She was at the door when We Webb said, “Ava, what you did tonight, flagging the order, holding the line with Denise, dealing with that officer.

” He stopped.

“Most nurses with 6 weeks in this building wouldn’t have seen any of it.

” She looked back at him.

“I’m not most nurses,” she said quietly.

And then she was gone.

[clears throat] 1:17 a.

m.

She pulled the curtain back and stepped into bay 4.

And Ror looked at her and said, “Federal custody order signed and served,” she said.

He exhaled.

It was the first time she had heard him do that.

“Actually, release a breath rather than manage one.

” Doyle made it.

He’s in the building.

Good.

A pause.

And Garrett being escorted out of the lobby as we speak, I imagine.

Roor closed his eyes for three seconds.

Just three.

Then he opened them.

“There’s something I didn’t tell you,” he said.

She waited.

“The vial,” he said.

“I know what’s in it.

It’s not morphine and it’s not a standard narcotic.

” He looked at her directly.

“It’s a compound that presents as natural cardiac arrest.

Undetectable in a standard talk screen.

You’d need a specific panel to find it.

” He paused.

I’ve seen it used before.

Once in Kandahar.

Once in a hotel in Brussels.

This is the third time.

She held that thought for exactly as long as she could afford to.

The same network, she said.

The same network.

11 years.

Different faces at the front.

Same infrastructure underneath.

He held her gaze.

Harland didn’t build this for Bay Ridge Memorial.

Bay Ridge Memorial was the final piece, the hub for domestic operations.

She had walked into the ER at 7:00 that evening, thinking about nothing more complicated than whether the night shift would be quiet enough to let her catch up on charting.

She was standing in the center of something that had been built over 11 years, and the only reason it was visible at all was because a man had signaled her with his hand, and she had recognized what it meant.

“Get some rest,” she said.

“Your vitals are stable.

Webb is watching the chart.

I’m not going anywhere.

Ava, he said.

She stopped.

Thank you, he said.

Just that simple and direct and without the particular weight of a man who was used to saying it.

She nodded once.

Then she stepped back through the curtain and she stood in the corridor of the overnight trauma wing of Bay Ridge Memorial Hospital and she let herself feel for exactly 10 seconds the full magnitude of what was unraveling.

11 years domestic operations a cardiac compound used three times across two continents.

a CEO two floors above her head who had just had his plan fall apart in real time and did not yet know how completely.

10 seconds.

She gave herself 10 seconds.

Then she picked up her paper chart, checked the time, 1:21 a.

m.

, and went back to work.

In his office on the fourth floor, Richard Harlland was no longer standing at the window.

He was at his desk, door locked, going through files with the specific urgency of a man who understood that his window for controlling the narrative was closing.

He deleted three emails.

He moved two documents to a server that was not part of the hospital’s main network.

He called a number that rang four times and went to voicemail, and he did not leave a message.

Then he opened his desk drawer and looked at the thing inside it.

He had not needed it in 11 years.

He picked it up, felt the weight of it, and set it back down.

Not yet, he told himself.

But the word yet meant something it had not meant an hour ago.

Downstairs, a rookie nurse, who was not a rookie at all, was standing at the nurse’s station with a paper chart, writing down vitals in her careful handwriting, looking for all the world like someone who was simply doing her job, which was in fact exactly what she was doing.

The paper chart in Ava’s hands had 12 entries on it now.

All in her handwriting, all accurate, all completely unremarkable to anyone who picked it up and read it.

Vitals, medication notes, observation times, the ordinary record of a patient being monitored through a stable night.

What the chart did not record was everything else.

1:31 a.

m.

[clears throat] Denise found her at the supply cabinet restocking IV bags that did not urgently need restocking.

It was the kind of task you did when you needed to stay visible without being stationary.

And Denise, who had 19 years of reading people in this building, came up beside her and did not pretend to be there for the IV bags.

There are two men in the lobby who are not police, Denise said quietly.

They came in through the side entrance and Marcus Webb personally walked them past the front desk without signing them in.

I watched it happen.

Ava kept her hands moving.

[clears throat] Okay.

Okay.

Denise repeated and her voice had a particular edge to it.

Not anger, not fear, something between the two.

Ava, I have worked this wing for 11 years.

I know what a normal night looks like.

I know what an abnormal night looks like.

and I know what a night looks like when something is happening that nobody is going to tell me about until it’s over.

She paused.

This is the third kind.

Ava sat down the IV bag.

She turned and looked at Denise, really looked at her, and she made a decision that was partly instinct and partly the understanding that Denise was already inside this whether she knew it or not.

Our patient in bay 4 is a federal protected witness.

Ava said the medication order that came in before he arrived was not a timestamp error.

Someone in this building tried to have him killed tonight.

The two men in the lobby are federal.

They’re here to help.

She held Denise’s gaze.

That’s everything I can tell you right now, but I need you to keep running this floor like nothing is happening.

Can you do that? Denise was quiet for four full seconds.

Who tried to kill him? I can’t say yet.

Is it someone in this building right now? Yes.

Another silence.

Denise picked up an IV bag, looked at it, set it back down.

My daughter works the morning shift, she said.

She starts at 6.

I know.

Is she going to be safe? Yes, Ava said, and she meant it with everything she had.

I will make sure of that.

Denise straightened up, smoothed her scrubs, looked back toward the nurse’s station with the expression of a woman who had made a decision and was not going to revisit it.

I’m going to go check on the patient in Bay 2, she said.

And then I’m going to make a fresh pot of coffee because it’s going to be a long night.

Thank you, Ava said.

Denise walked away without looking back.

1:44 a.

m.

Marcus Doyle had set up a temporary position in Web’s office, not commandeering it, just occupying a corner of it with a laptop and a phone in the particular economy of movement of someone who had run field operations out of worse spaces.

Webb was at his desk.

The two of them had reached the particular understanding of two professional men who respected competence and had no time for anything else.

Ava came in and shut the door.

The audit log, Doyle said without preamble.

Webb pulled it.

Take a look.

She crossed to the laptop.

The log was open on the screen.

A column of timestamps and access codes and actions taken within the hospital’s medication administration system.

She scanned it quickly, the way she had been taught to read intelligence documents, looking for the anomaly rather than reading linearly.

She found it in 40 seconds.

There are three separate access events, she said.

Not one.

Doyle nodded.

Keep going.

The morphine order at 11:49.

That’s the one I flagged.

But there’s a second access event at 11:31, 18 minutes earlier.

She looked closer.

Someone accessed Ror’s pre-registered patient file.

He was pre-registered.

The task force had a protocol, Doyle said.

In case Ror needed emergency medical care during the operation, his file was preloaded into three hospitals along his operational route.

Standard procedure.

It was supposed to be a security measure.

Someone knew about the protocol.

Ava said, “Someone inside the task force,” Doyle said.

“Same someone who gave Garrett the route.

” And the third access event.

Doyle’s expression did not change, but something behind it did.

Third event is at 11:58, 6 minutes after Ror arrived.

Someone accessed the hospital’s internal camera system using a different administrative code and pulled the live feed from the trauma bay.

The room was very quiet.

They were watching.

Ava said in real time, Doyle confirmed.

They saw him come in.

They saw the team working on him.

And he paused.

They saw you.

She understood what that meant before he finished saying it.

Whoever had been watching that camera feed had seen her flag the medication record, had seen her speak to Denise, had seen her go to Web’s office, had watched the plan unravel in real time through their own hospital security system, and had known that the woman doing the unraveling was a six-week nurse who was moving with a precision
that did not belong to someone with 6 weeks of experience.

Harlon, she said.

The camera access code is registered to the CEO’s administrative account, Webb said from his desk.

His voice was careful, in controlled, and very tired.

I pulled that separately just now.

She turned to look at him.

Webb, who had eaten lunch with this man, Webb, who had attended his fundraisers.

He knows I saw the order, she said.

Yes, Doyle said, which means he knows I’m a problem.

Yes, she processed that.

She had been a problem before.

She had been a problem in places considerably less controlled than a hospital in New Jersey.

And she was still here.

But this was different.

This was her floor, her colleagues, her patient in Bay 4 who was trying to hold himself together through cracked ribs and a splenic contusion and the knowledge that the man who wanted him dead was two floors above his head.

What’s Harland doing? right now? She asked.

We have someone on the fourth floor, Doyle said.

He’s in his office, door locked.

He’s been making calls, but we haven’t been able to pull the numbers yet.

He’s using a burner.

He has a burner in his office.

He had a burner in his office, Doyle said with a slight emphasis on the tents, which tells you how long he’s been prepared for a night like this.

2:03 a.

m.

She went back to bay 4 because that was where she needed to be and because Ror’s vitals needed checking and because she had something to tell him that he was not going to like.

He was awake.

Of course he was awake.

She updated his chart, checked the monitors, adjusted the IV flow rate by a fraction.

All real, all necessary.

And then she leaned close enough that her voice would carry no further than his ear.

Harlon was watching the trauma bay on the security feed.

She said he saw everything.

He [clears throat] knows the order was flagged.

Ror’s jaw tighten.

How long ago? He’s had the information since approximately midnight.

2 hours, Ror said.

He was calculating.

She could see it.

the same rapid internal assessment she had been doing all night, running scenarios, weighing variables.

He hasn’t moved yet.

No, which means he’s waiting for something or someone.

He looked at her.

What’s his exit look like? If this goes fully federal tonight, arrests, seizures, the whole sequence, what does Harlon do? Doyle thinks he’ll try to run the documents first, destroy what he can, move what he can’t destroy.

He won’t run himself.

Doyle doesn’t think so.

He thinks Harlon believes he can still control this.

She paused.

Men like him usually do, right up until the moment they can’t.

Ror was quiet for a beat.

Then there’s a server, he said.

We knew about it going into this operation.

It’s not part of the hospital’s main network.

separate physical hardware somewhere in this building.

That server has 11 years of transaction records, names, amounts, supply chain routing, DoD contract numbers, everything.

He met her eyes.

That is the case.

Not the vial, not the audit log, not me.

That server is what convicts everyone involved from the bottom to the top.

Where is it? We didn’t know exactly.

Somewhere in the administrative wing, he paused.

But if Harlon thinks the operation is collapsing tonight, his first move is not running.

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