
You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now
Chapter 5
The waiting room was a purgatory of beige walls and plastic chairs. The patient's wife sat clutching a rosary, her eyes red and swollen. The son paced back and forth, the fight completely gone out of him.
Jack sat in the VIP lounge adjacent to the waiting area. He had canceled his next three meetings. He didn't know why. He told himself it was a business decision. The woman he had just vouched for was, inexplicably, his ex-wife. Her success or failure now reflected on him.
But deep down, a nagging confusion kept him anchored to the chair.
Inside the OR, time stood still. Kailey was in the zone. The bone flap was removed, exposing the dura. The hematoma was massive, a dark pool of blood compressing the brain.
"Retractor," Kailey said.
Tessa handed it to her. Kailey's hands moved with blinding speed. She evacuated the clot, controlling the bleeding with precise bursts of bipolar energy. The brain swelled slightly, then relaxed back into its natural contour.
"Sutures," Kailey said.
Four hours later, the final knot was tied. The bone was replaced, the skin closed. The patient's vitals were stable. The herniation was reversed.
"We're done," Kailey announced.
The room erupted into quiet applause. The scrub nurse wiped a tear from her eye. Tessa let out a breath she didn't know she was holding.
Kailey walked out of the OR. She pulled off her surgical cap, letting her hair fall loose. She looked exhausted, but her eyes were clear.
She walked into the waiting room. The wife jumped to her feet. The son stopped pacing.
"The surgery was successful," Kailey said. "We removed the clot and relieved the pressure. He's going to the ICU. He should make a full recovery."
The wife let out a wail of relief, collapsing into her son's arms. The son looked at Kailey, his face a mask of shame. He walked over to her and bowed his head.
"I'm sorry," he whispered. "I was scared. Thank you for saving him."
Kailey nodded once. "Take care of your mother."
She turned to leave.
Jack stood in the doorway of the VIP lounge, watching her. The harsh hospital light illuminated her face. He saw the sharp jawline, the high cheekbones, the steady gaze.
This was the woman from the Rust Belt, the one he thought he'd bought and discarded. Now, seeing her alive with purpose and authority, he felt a foreign sensation coil in his gut.
It was a disquieting mix of confusion and a flicker of respect. It was a warning that his controlled world had just been breached by something entirely unpredictable.
The hospital administrator rushed up to Jack. "Mr. Velasquez! What a triumph! Dr. Randall is truly a treasure. You made the right choice backing her."
Jack ignored the man. He stepped forward, intercepting Kailey as she walked down the hall.
"Dr. Randall," he said.
Kailey stopped. She looked up at him. There was no fear, no awe, no resentment. Just a cool, professional assessment.
"Mr. Velasquez," she replied.
"I have a private case," Jack said, getting straight to the point. "A person very important to me needs surgery. The best surgery. I want you to do it."
It wasn't a request. It was a command.
Kailey stared at him for a long moment. The man who had ignored her for two years was now standing in front of her, asking for her help. The irony was a bitter pill, but she swallowed it.
"I'll need to see the file," she said.
"I'll have it sent to your office," Jack said. "Don't disappoint me."
He turned and walked away, his security detail falling into step behind him. Kailey watched him go, her expression unreadable.
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