
You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now
Chapter 3
The neurosurgery conference room at New York General Hospital was packed. Every attending, resident, and intern was present. The air was thick with coffee breath and unspoken questions.
Julian Adler, the department chief, walked in. Behind him followed a woman. She was young, too young. She wore a simple white coat, her dark hair pulled back in a neat ponytail.
The room fell silent. Then, the whispers started.
"This is our new Deputy Chief?" Dr. Warren Cole muttered to the doctor beside him. He was a veteran, fifteen years at this hospital. He had published dozens of papers. He had expected the promotion.
"This is Dr. Kailey Randall," Adler announced, his voice cutting through the murmurs. "She will be joining us as the new Deputy Chief of Neurosurgery."
A collective intake of breath echoed through the room. Kailey Randall. The name meant nothing to them. In the elite world of neurosurgery, reputations were built on decades of published research and high-profile surgeries. This woman had neither.
Kailey stood at the front of the room. She didn't smile. She didn't fidget. She simply nodded, her gaze sweeping over the crowd with a clinical detachment.
Adler didn't offer any explanations. He simply clicked to the first slide. "Let's begin. We have a complex case today."
The scan on the screen showed a basilar tip aneurysm. It was a monster, nestled deep within the brain, surrounded by critical vessels.
"Current options?" Adler asked the room.
Warren Cole spoke up first. "Endovascular coiling. It's the safest approach. Open surgery carries too high a risk of rupture."
"It's also a death sentence," a resident muttered. "The aneurysm is too wide-necked. The coils won't hold."
The room erupted into debate. Pacing, risks, morbidity rates. The arguments went in circles.
Kailey hadn't moved from her spot by the screen. She stepped forward, picking up the laser pointer.
"Dr. Cole is right about the coiling," she said, her voice calm and steady. "But he's looking at the wrong approach."
She pointed to a tiny, almost invisible vessel branching off the aneurysm. "This perforator is compromised. If we go in endovascularly, we lose it. The patient wakes up locked in."
The room went dead quiet. No one had noticed that vessel.
Kailey clicked to a 3D reconstruction. "We go in microsurgically. Subtemporal approach. We clip the aneurysm and bypass the perforator using a superficial temporal artery graft."
She laid out the steps quickly, precisely. The angles, the depth, the tension on the suture. It was a map through a minefield. It was brilliant. It was insane.
Warren Cole stared at the screen, his mouth slightly open. The logic was flawless. The anatomy was perfect. This wasn't textbook. This was art.
Adler smiled. "Prep the OR. Dr. Randall will be the lead surgeon."
Four hours later, Kailey stood at the operating table. The hum of the microscope and the rhythmic beeping of the monitors were the only sounds.
Her hands moved with a speed and precision that left the assisting nurses scrambling to keep up. She didn't hesitate. She didn't second-guess. Every cut, every cauterization, every suture was placed with millimeter accuracy.
Up in the observation gallery, Warren Cole watched the screen. The aneurysm deflated perfectly. The bypass flowed. The brain remained pristine.
Cole felt a chill run down his arms. He had seen this technique before. Once. In a grainy, leaked video from a warzone hospital. The hands in that video moved exactly like Kailey's hands moved now.
"The Surgeon," Cole whispered to himself.
He shook his head. Impossible. The Surgeon was a myth, a ghost story told in medical schools. This was Kailey Randall, a woman with no history.
The final clip was placed. Kailey stepped back. "Close her up," she ordered, pulling off her gloves.
She walked out of the OR, stripping off her gown. Her back ached, and her eyes were dry, but her mind was sharp.
Tessa Powell, the intern who had assisted her, chased her down the hall. "Dr. Randall! That was... that was unbelievable!"
Kailey slowed her pace. "It was adequate," she said.
"Adequate?" Tessa gasped. "It was a miracle! How did you come up with that approach?"
Kailey stopped at the window overlooking the city. The sun was setting, painting the skyline in shades of orange and gold.
"Because," she said softly, her eyes reflecting the light, "I've seen worse."
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