Part 2
The man holding the Heckler & Koch to my skull was roughly six-foot-two, carrying maybe two hundred and ten pounds of dense, gym-sculpted muscle. As his cold gaze searched my face for a flinch that wasn’t coming, my mind went to work mapping his anatomy with clinical precision.
Right-hand dominant. His weight leaned slightly toward his left heel, meaning his right knee suffered from an old, stiff injury—most likely an unhealed ACL tear. His breathing was shallow, his blink rate sitting at roughly twelve per minute. He had elite reaction speed, but he radiated the distinct, dangerous scent of pure arrogance. And in my line of work, arrogance always makes people sloppy.
“You don’t shake like a civilian,” he murmured, his voice dropping an octave as his eyes narrowed. He slowly lowered the hot barrel of the pistol from my forehead to the sensitive hollow of my throat. “Who taught you how to control your heart rate under the gun, nurse?”
“Nursing school,” I replied evenly, keeping my tone mild. “You see a lot of blood in a city ER.”
He didn’t buy it, but before he could press the muzzle deeper into my skin, his tactical radio crackled to life. One of his accomplices—a lanky man currently guarding the east stairwell—called out over the encrypted comms.
“Boss, we’ve got the perimeter secured. The charges are wired to the main oxygen lines and the load-bearing concrete pillars down in the sub-basement. Ten-minute countdown timer is set on my mark.”
My blood ran ice cold beneath my scrubs.
They weren’t just here to execute a simple extraction. This was a scorched-earth operation. Rigging the hospital’s central oxygen supply meant that when those military-grade detonators sparked, the resulting thermobaric explosion would instantly turn this entire five-story medical center into a raging brick-and-mortar crematorium. Four hundred innocent patients. Two hundred dedicated staff members. The little blonde girl with the stuffed rabbit. All of them wiped out just to erase a single paper trail.
“Copy that,” the leader said into his shoulder mic. He jerked his head down the hallway. “Walk, Hayes. Take us to OR 3 right now.”
I kept my hands raised at shoulder height and started walking down the sterile, fluorescent-lit corridor. The smell of antiseptic suddenly felt suffocating. As we passed the central nurses’ station, my eyes darted to the reflective glass of the dispensary window. I caught the mirrored silhouette of the third gunman trailing twelve feet behind us, his rifle raised. I needed to separate them. I needed an equalizer before that timer hit zero.
Suddenly, the leader’s radio hissed again. This time, the voice on the other end wasn’t calm; it was frantic, high-pitched, and borderline breathless.
“Boss… Boss, hold your position! Do not touch that woman!”
The leader stopped dead in his tracks, his brow furrowing in irritation. “Speak clearly, Miller. What’s the issue?”
“I just ran her facial profile through the leaked Langley database,” the voice stammered over the static, thick with genuine dread. “That nurse… her real name isn’t Morgan Hayes. Her file is flagged Level-9 Department of Defense. She’s former JSOC. Callsign Spectre-Zero. Boss… she’s the Ghost.”
The silence that fell over the hallway was heavier than any gunshot.
I watched the leader’s thick neck muscles go rigid. The color literally drained from his tanned cheeks. In the dark, mercenary underworld of private military contractors, Spectre-Zero wasn’t just a retired soldier; she was the apex boogeyman they warned rookie operators about to keep them alert during night watches—a phantom credited with dismantling an entire rogue militia in Benghazi using nothing but a combat blade and a blown transformer.
Slowly, the leader took a half-step backward, the muzzle of his pistol trembling for the very first time. “You…” he whispered, his voice cracking. “You were reported dead in Syria.”
“I retired,” I said softly, letting my gentle, customer-service nurse persona drop into the abyss. My voice shifted into the flat, sub-zero register of a Tier-1 operator. “And you just brought plastic explosives into my workplace.”
Before his panicked brain could signal his index finger to pull the trigger, the hospital’s overhead PA system chimed with a sharp, double-tone feedback screech.
A deep, unmistakable voice echoed through the hallway speakers. It belonged to General Caleb Ross—my former commanding officer at Joint Special Operations Command, currently sitting in a federal armored vehicle parked just beyond the police barricades outside.
“Spectre-Zero,” General Ross’s voice boomed through the ceiling tiles, calm, authoritative, and absolute. “We have the perimeter locked down. You are clear to engage. I repeat: Permission granted.”
The leader’s eyes blew wide in pure, primal terror. He squeezed the trigger.
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Part 3
The human brain takes roughly 0.2 seconds to process an auditory command and translate it into a motor function. I didn’t wait for his brain to finish the math.
The moment his finger twitched, I pivoted hard on my right heel, dropping my center of gravity beneath the incoming trajectory of the muzzle. The suppressed round hissed past my left ear, burying itself into the drywall with a hollow thud.
In the same fluid kinetic chain, my left hand snapped upward, trapping the hot slide of his Heckler & Koch, forcing it out of battery so the next round couldn’t chamber. With my right palm, I delivered a brutal, ascending palm-strike directly to the base of his chin. His jaw snapped shut with a sickening crack. Before his compromised equilibrium could register the trauma, I swept his bad left leg, drove my knee into his sternum as we hit the linoleum, and wrenched the pistol free. I flipped the weapon, driving the heavy steel butt of the magazine into his temple.
Three seconds. That was all it took. The mercenary went limp, his eyes rolling back into his skull.
Down the hall, the trailing gunman raised his rifle, but the reinforced glass of the main entrance shattered inward in a synchronized storm of flashbangs. General Ross’s federal tactical operators flooded the corridor like a black tide, laser sights cutting through the smoke. Within fifteen seconds, the remaining shooters were pinned to the floor, disarmed and zip-tied.
I stood up, wiping a fleck of the leader’s blood off my cheek. The crisis felt over. It wasn’t.
The unconscious leader suddenly coughed, his eyelids fluttering open as a federal medic knelt beside him. He looked up at me, a bloody bubble forming on his lips, and let out a wet, mocking chuckle. “You think… you won?” he wheezed. “Those basement charges… they aren’t wired to our comms.”
Before I could interrogate him, the hospital’s intercom speakers crackled again. This time, it wasn’t General Ross.
It was a voice smooth, cultured, and dripping with sociopathic calm—Julian Vance, the rogue intelligence broker my old unit had been hunting for three years.
“Bravo, Spectre,” Vance’s voice purred through the ceiling tiles. “Truly a masterclass in close-quarters combat. But my men were merely the distraction to ensure OR 3 remained occupied while I secured the data drives down here. In sixty seconds, I will manually overload the hospital’s high-pressure steam boilers. The blast wave will ignite the oxygen lines regardless. Enjoy the fireworks.”
“Evacuate the building!” I roared to the tactical team lead. “Get every patient out onto the street now!”
While the federal agents began frantically funneling screaming patients and staff out the emergency exits, I didn’t run toward the daylight. I grabbed a fresh magazine from the fallen leader’s vest, slapped it into the captured 9mm, and sprinted toward the subterranean stairwell.
I took the concrete stairs three at a time, my boots slapping against the damp stone. The sub-basement of Oakridge General was a labyrinth of tangled copper pipes, massive industrial water heaters, and roaring ventilation shafts.
I burst through the heavy steel double doors of the boiler room, my weapon raised in a high-ready stance.
Julian Vance stood atop the elevated steel catwalk overlooking the primary pressure valves. He was dressed in a pristine charcoal suit, holding a ruggedized satellite tablet in one hand and a remote detonator transmitter in the other.
“You’re thirty seconds too late, Morgan,” Vance smiled, his thumb hovering over the red toggle switch. “It really is a shame. You look remarkably good in scrubs.”
He pressed the button.
A sharp, metallic click echoed through the humid air.
Vance blinked. He pressed it again. Click. He furiously hammered the transmitter screen. Click. Click. Click.
Nothing exploded. The boilers continued their steady, rhythmic, low-frequency hum.
“Looking for these, honey?” a voice called out from the shadows beneath the catwalk.
Out from behind a massive turbine stepped Martha—our sixty-two-year-old Head Nurse. She was holding a massive pair of yellow-handled industrial bolt cutters, her white nursing shoes covered in grease. Scattered at her feet were half a dozen severed, thick coaxial cables pulled directly out of the central junction box.
“I’ve worked in this building since 1984,” Martha said loudly, wiping a streak of soot off her forehead. “You think some man in a fancy suit is gonna wire up my basement without me knowing where the master conduits are? I cut the hard-lines ten minutes ago.”
Vance’s face contorted in pure, unadulterated fury. He reached under his jacket for a backup weapon, but my finger was already squeezing the trigger.
Crack.
A single 9mm round shattered his right kneecap. Vance shrieked, collapsing against the steel railing as his detonator clattered down onto the concrete floor below. I vaulted up the metal stairs, kicked the firearm away from his twitching hand, and drove him face-first into the diamond-plate steel flooring, pinning his arms behind his back.
“Julian Vance,” I recited coldly as the heavy plastic zip-ties bit into his wrists. “You are under arrest for treason, terrorism, and disturbing a hospital quiet zone.”
Twenty minutes later, the red and blue strobe lights of forty emergency vehicles painted the Seattle night sky. The patients had been safely relocated to the adjacent parking structure; not a single civilian casualty had occurred.
As I sat on the tailgate of an ambulance getting a superficial laceration on my forearm wrapped, a tiny hand tugged gently at the hem of my dirtied scrubs.
I looked down. It was Lily—the six-year-old girl from the waiting room, still clutching her stuffed rabbit. Her wide, tear-stained eyes stared up at me with absolute awe.
“Are you… are you a superhero?” she whispered.
I smiled, the heavy armor of Spectre-Zero melting away into the cool evening breeze. I knelt down to her eye level and gently tucked a stray blonde curl behind her ear.
“No, sweetie,” I said softly. “I’m just a nurse. The real heroes are the doctors, the staff, and Miss Martha over there. We just protect each other.”
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