“You’re too slow, Doreen. Move it.”
Dr. Lyle didn’t just walk past me; he checked my shoulder with his, sending me stumbling into the med-cart. My bad leg – the one I dragged behind me for every twelve-hour shift – buckled.
“Sorry, Doctor,” I mumbled, gripping the cart until my knuckles turned white.
“Don’t be sorry. Be competent,” he sneered, loud enough for the entire ER to hear. “Or go work at the DMV. You fit the speed.”
The interns giggled. I looked down at my orthopedic shoes and kept my mouth shut. I always do.
Then the floor started to vibrate.
It wasn’t an earthquake.
The coffee in Dr. Lyleโs mug rippled into a tiny tsunami. Then the windows rattled violently.
THWUMP-THWUMP-THWUMP.
Four military-grade Blackhawk helicopters screamed over the hospital roof, landing in the parking lot with enough force to set off every car alarm on the block.
Before anyone could breathe, the ER doors flew open.
Six Marines in full tactical gear poured in, rifles high, moving with terrifying precision.
“Nobody move!” the point man roared.
Dr. Lyle stepped forward, his ego bigger than his survival instinct. “This is a sterile environment! You can’t just barge in here with guns! I’m the Chief Resident!”
The lead Marine didn’t even slow down. He stiff-armed the doctor, sending him crashing into a wall.
“Secure the perimeter!” the soldier barked. “We are looking for Angel Six. Code Black. Immediate extraction.”
Dr. Lyle scrambled up, red-faced. “There is no Angel here! Just sick people and this cripple!” He pointed a trembling finger at me.
The Marineโs eyes scanned the room. They locked onto me.
The room went deathly silent.
The soldier marched right up to me. The interns covered their mouths.
He didn’t arrest me. He dropped to one knee and bowed his head.
“Commander,” he said, his voice shaking. “We found them. But we can’t disarm the payload without your biometrics.”
Dr. Lyle started to laugh nervously. “Her? Are you joking? She changes bedpans!”
I finally looked up. I stopped slouching. The “pain” Iโd faked for three years vanished as I stood at my full, imposing height.
“I told you I was dead,” I said, my voice dropping to a register of cold steel.
“The world needs you one last time,” the Marine pleaded, holding out a secure comms unit.
I sighed. I reached up and ripped off my name tag, tossing it onto Dr. Lyle’s chest.
“You wanted me to move faster, Doctor?” I whispered.
I rolled up my left pant leg, and Dr. Lyle screamed when he saw what was actually underneath my scrubs.
It wasn’t scar tissue. It wasn’t a brace.
It was a leg made of polished carbon fiber and titanium.
Intricate wiring pulsed with a soft blue light along the articulated joints, and a small, sealed panel sat just below the knee.
This was not a medical prosthetic. It was a piece of advanced military hardware.
“What is that?” Dr. Lyle stammered, his face a mask of horrified confusion.
I ignored him, my attention fixed on the soldier kneeling before me.
“Sergeant Miller, on your feet,” I commanded. My voice was different now. Not the meek whisper of Doreen, but the crisp authority of Commander Eva Rostova.
He snapped to his feet, relief washing over his face. “Ma’am.”
“Give me the sit-rep,” I ordered, taking the comms unit.
As Miller began a rapid-fire briefing, the world around me seemed to slow. The shocked faces of my colleagues, the beeping machines, the distant sirensโit all faded into the background.
I was no longer Doreen, the nurse who cleaned wounds and comforted grieving families.
I was Angel Six, the woman they sent in when all other options had failed.
“The devices are networked, ma’am,” Miller said, his voice low and urgent. “Five of them, spread across the city’s critical infrastructure. The water treatment plant, the central power grid, Grand Central Station.”
He paused, taking a breath. “If we try to disarm one, they all detonate.”
“And the trigger?” I asked, already knowing the answer.
“It’s tied to you, Commander. He’s using our own security protocols against us. The entire system can only be shut down from the central node with your biometric signature.”
A cold dread seeped into my bones. “He?”
Sergeant Millerโs eyes met mine, and they were filled with a grim certainty. “It’s Marcus Thorne, ma’am. He’s the one behind it.”
The name hit me like a physical blow. Marcus. My second-in-command.
The man who had supposedly died in the fire in Istanbul, the same fire that had taken my leg and my will to fight. The fire I had supposedly died in, too.
“Thorne is alive,” I breathed, the words tasting like ash.
“Yes, ma’am. And he’s got the city wired to blow in ninety minutes.”
There was no more time for shock. I straightened my back, the years of combat training flooding back into my muscles.
“Let’s move,” I said, my limp completely gone as I strode towards the ER doors.
The Marines formed a diamond formation around me, their weapons ready.
We moved past a stunned Dr. Lyle, who was still leaning against the wall, his mouth agape.
He watched the “cripple” he’d tormented for years walk with the powerful, fluid grace of a predator.
Outside, the wind from the four Blackhawk rotors was a hurricane. It whipped my scrubs around my legs and tore at my hair.
Miller guided me to the lead helicopter, its side door open and waiting.
Inside, it wasn’t a transport chopper. It was a mobile command center.
Banks of monitors glowed with schematics, satellite imagery, and a large, red countdown timer already at 1:28:43.
I strapped myself into a seat as the helicopter lifted off, the hospital shrinking below us.
The city spread out like a glittering carpet, each light representing lives that were now in my hands.
“Patch him through,” I ordered the comms tech.
A moment later, a face appeared on the main screen. It was older, scarred, and twisted with a bitter rage I knew all too well.
“Hello, Eva,” Marcus Thorne said, his voice a distorted rasp. “Or should I call you Doreen now? I hear you’re quite good with bedpans.”
“Marcus,” I said, keeping my voice level. “Why are you doing this?”
He laughed, a hollow, broken sound. “Why? You left me to burn, Eva! You chose the mission over me. You ran and hid while I had to claw my way back from the dead!”
“I thought you were gone,” I said, the old guilt twisting in my gut. “There was nothing I could do.”
“There’s always something you can do!” he roared. “I learned that lesson well. And now, I’m going to teach it to you. I’m going to burn your new life to the ground, just like you left me to burn in the old one.”
“It doesn’t have to be this way, Marcus.”
“Oh, but it does,” he sneered. “I’ve improved on your design, Eva. The very system you created to protect us is now my instrument. It only answers to its creator. Your hand, your biometrics. But I’ve added a little surprise.”
He zoomed in on a schematic on his screen. It showed the central node, the one I had to access.
“The biometric scanner is pressure-sensitive,” he explained. “And it’s linked to an accelerant injector. You press too hard, you hesitate, you flinch… and boom. A beautiful, city-wide fire.”
My blood ran cold. He knew my weaknesses. He knew about the phantom pains, the slight tremor in my hand I’d developed after the fire.
He was using my own trauma against me.
“The clock is ticking, Angel Six,” he whispered, and the screen went blank.
I turned to my team. “Where is the central node?”
The tech pointed to a blinking red dot on the map. “The sub-level of the old Stock Exchange building. Heavily fortified. And we’re getting reports of armed hostiles converging on the location.”
“Of course,” I muttered. He wasn’t going to make it easy.
“Get me a weapon,” I said. “And get me on the ground.”
Minutes later, we were repelling down ropes into a dark alley two blocks from the Exchange. The sounds of distant sirens were now joined by the crackle of gunfire.
Thorne’s men were already engaging the local police, creating chaos.
We moved through the shadows, a silent, deadly unit. The meek nurse was a ghost, replaced by a commander who knew every inch of this deadly chess board.
We breached the building through a service entrance, Miller and his team moving with practiced efficiency.
The firefight inside was intense. Thorne’s mercenaries were well-trained, but my team was better.
I moved with them, a pistol in my hand, my bionic leg giving me a stability and speed that felt both alien and familiar.
We fought our way down, level by level, the air growing colder and thicker with the smell of concrete and cordite.
Finally, we reached the sub-level. It was a vast, cavernous room filled with humming servers.
And in the center, on a raised platform, was the device.
It was a sleek, black pedestal with a single hand-scanner on top, glowing ominously. The countdown timer above it read 00:14:21.
As we approached, a new problem arose.
A proximity alarm blared. Metal shutters slammed down over our exit, and a voice echoed through the roomโMarcus’s voice.
“I knew you’d make it this far, Eva. But I told you I added a surprise.”
A new screen flickered to life on the device. It showed a new schematic.
“The biometric lock is now triple-encoded,” he gloated. “It doesn’t just need your palm print anymore. It needs a specific neuro-electric pulse to be fired from your leg’s primary interface port.”
I stared at the panel just below my knee.
“But here’s the fun part,” Thorne continued. “To generate the correct pulse, a specific counter-agent has to be injected directly into the primary nerve bundle cluster. A single drop. The needle has to be accurate to a tenth of a millimeter.”
My heart sank.
“Any deeper, and you sever the connection, triggering the failsafe. Too shallow, and the pulse is corrupted, also triggering the failsafe,” he said, savoring every word. “You’d need the steady hand of a surgeon. And you, my dear Eva, are fresh out of surgeons.”
The timer clicked down. 00:11:03.
My team looked at me, their faces grim. We were trapped. There was no one who could perform such a delicate procedure under this kind of pressure.
My mind raced, flipping through options, but found none.
Then, an idea sparked. A terrible, ironic, and possibly brilliant idea.
“Miller,” I said, my voice tight. “Get the chopper back to the hospital. Now.”
“Ma’am?” he asked, confused.
“There’s one person in this city who has the arrogance, the ego, and the steady hands to do this,” I said, a bitter smile on my face. “And he owes me one.”
“Who, ma’am?”
“Get me the Chief Resident,” I commanded. “Get me Dr. Lyle.”
The flight back was the longest ten minutes of my life.
Miller’s men practically dragged a sputtering, terrified Dr. Lyle from the ER and onto the helicopter.
He looked at me, at my tactical gear and the grim expression on my face, and all the color drained from his.
“You… you…” he stammered.
“No time, Doctor,” I cut him off, my voice flat. “I need your hands.”
In the air, I explained the situation, my voice calm and precise, like I was briefing a subordinate. I showed him the schematic, the needle, the vial of counter-agent.
“You want me to stick a needle… into your… leg-thing?” he asked, his voice trembling.
“I need you to perform a micro-injection into a nerve bundle interface,” I corrected him. “You miss, and millions of people die. No pressure.”
He looked like he was going to be sick.
“I can’t,” he whispered. “I’m a doctor, not… not this!”
I grabbed the front of his scrubs, my face inches from his. The fear in his eyes was palpable.
“Listen to me,” I said, my voice dropping to a dangerous low. “For three years, you’ve walked around that hospital like you were a god, judging everyone, belittling them. You talked about competence. You mocked my speed.”
I let him go, and his own words hung in the air between us.
“Now is your chance to prove how competent you are,” I said, my tone shifting from anger to command. “The world needs a doctor with a steady hand. So be one.”
He stared at me, then at his own shaking hands. Something shifted in his eyes. The arrogance was gone, replaced by the terrifying weight of responsibility.
When we landed back at the Exchange, only four minutes remained on the clock.
We rushed back to the sub-level, Dr. Lyle clutching the medical kit like his life depended on it. Which, in a way, it did.
I sat on the edge of the platform and exposed the interface port on my leg.
“Here,” I said, pointing. “The injection site is marked. You have one chance.”
Dr. Lyle knelt, his face pale with sweat. He prepped the syringe, his movements clumsy at first, then becoming more practiced, more sure.
The muscle memory of his profession was taking over.
“Tell me when,” he said, his voice barely a whisper.
“Do it now,” I ordered.
He brought the needle to my leg. I could see the tip vibrating.
“I can’t,” he choked out. “My hands are shaking.”
“Look at me, Doctor,” I said firmly. He looked up, his eyes wide with panic.
“Forget the bomb. Forget the timer. You are a doctor. I am your patient. This is a procedure. Just focus on the medicine. You can do this.”
He took a deep, shuddering breath. He looked back at the injection site. His hand steadied.
He pushed the needle in. A soft click echoed in the silent room as the injector delivered its single, precise drop.
The light on my leg’s panel turned from blue to green.
“It’s done,” he breathed.
The timer read 00:00:17.
I stood up and walked to the pedestal. I placed my hand on the scanner.
A wave of energy surged up my arm, connecting with the pulse from my leg. The system recognized me.
A loud chime echoed through the room.
The countdown timer stopped at 00:00:03.
On the screen, Thorne’s face appeared one last time, his expression one of pure, disbelieving fury. Then the feed died.
It was over.
Back in the now-quiet ER, the sun was beginning to rise.
My team was preparing to leave, taking me with them. My life as Doreen was over.
Dr. Lyle approached me, looking exhausted and humbled.
“I… I don’t know what to say,” he started.
“You don’t have to say anything,” I replied, my voice softer now.
“Why?” he asked. “Why work here? A person like you… you could have been doing anything.”
I looked around at the controlled chaos of the hospital, at the nurses and doctors working tirelessly.
“I was tired of breaking things, Doctor,” I said. “I just wanted to fix them for a while. To help people in a quiet way, where the only victory that mattered was a patient getting to go home.”
He nodded, finally understanding. “I was wrong about you. About everything.”
“You judged what you could see,” I told him. “My shoes, my limp. You never thought to look deeper.”
I turned to leave with Sergeant Miller.
“Wait,” Lyle called out. “Will I see you again?”
I offered him a small, sad smile. “I hope not, Doctor. If you see me again, it means your world is in a great deal of trouble.”
He watched as I walked out the door, my stride even and strong.
The true measure of a person isn’t found in their speed, their strength, or the title on their name tag. It’s found in their heart, in the quiet battles they fight, and in the strength they show when the world needs them most. Look past the surface, because sometimes the person you dismiss is the only one who can save you.



