The shrill, unbroken wail of the heart monitor sliced through the dead air of the VIP delivery room.
Dr. Carver reached out and flipped the switch. The machine went silent. He picked up the metal clipboard at the end of the bed, his face a mask of practiced apathy, and dragged his pen across the chart. A single, heavy stroke. No vital signs.
A nurse in blue scrubs stepped toward the incubator. She picked up a square of crisp, white medical cotton, her hands moving to drape it over the impossibly small, bloodless face of the infant inside.
On the bed, Allegra struggled to open her eyes. The heavy dose of anesthesia and the massive blood loss turned the sterile room into a blur of double vision and harsh fluorescent lights.
She opened her mouth to scream, to tell them to stop, but her throat was completely dry. Only a pathetic, broken hiss scraped past her lips.
Is this quack seriously incapable of finding a pulse?
The voice exploded inside Allegra's skull. It was crisp, female, and dripping with heavy sarcasm.
Allegra's pupils dilated so fast her eyes ached. She jerked her head side to side, panic seizing her chest. The drugs. The blood loss. She was having a psychotic break.
Oh, great. We're doomed, the voice echoed again, bouncing against the inside of her forehead. My hopeless romantic of a mother actually thinks I'm dead.
Allegra's gaze snapped to the incubator. The world tunneled until all she could see was that tiny, motionless chest. A violent, irrational certainty slammed into her ribs. A wave of blinding dizziness washed over her, the room spinning wildly. But then, a strange, electric jolt sparked at the base of her skull-a phantom surge of adrenaline that bypassed her exhausted muscles and forced her limbs to move.
The nurse's fingers brushed the edge of the incubator.
Allegra bit down hard on the tip of her tongue. The sharp, metallic taste of her own blood flooded her mouth, and the spike of pure physical agony shredded the fog of the anesthesia.
She ripped her right arm upward. The IV needle tore out of the back of her hand, sending a spray of warm red droplets across the pristine white bedsheets.
Dr. Carver spun around, his eyes wide with shock.
"Mrs. Camacho, please," he said, holding his hands up in a placating gesture. "I know this is devastating, but you need to lie back down-"
Allegra swung her bare feet over the edge of the mattress. Her soles hit the freezing tiles. Her legs buckled instantly, and her knees slammed into the hard floor with a sickening thud. Pain flared through her fresh surgical incision, hot and paralyzing.
Don't just kneel there! the voice in her head shrieked. Get up! The bad men are coming! They want to hurt me!
The sheer panic in that voice hit Allegra like a physical blow to the stomach. The air left her lungs. Ten years of blind devotion to the hospital's elite staff fractured right down the middle. She didn't know what was happening, but a primal, desperate instinct screamed that her baby was in danger.
The nurse rushed forward, grabbing Allegra's upper arm to haul her back to the bed.
Allegra shoved her. Hard. The adrenaline masking her torn abdomen gave her a burst of terrifying strength, sending the nurse stumbling backward into a tray of instruments.
Allegra crawled, then dragged herself up using the metal edge of the incubator. Her trembling hands reached inside and scooped up the freezing, weightless body of her daughter.
"Mrs. Camacho, put the deceased down immediately," Dr. Carver snapped, his professional facade cracking. "This is a severe violation of hospital protocol." He lunged forward to grab the infant.
Allegra twisted away, pressing the baby tight against her bare collarbone. Beneath her skin, against her own racing pulse, she felt it. A flutter. A heartbeat so faint it was barely a whisper, but it was there.
Thank God, the voice sighed in her mind. She's not a total idiot.
The confirmation hit Allegra's bloodstream like liquid fire. Her daughter was alive. The doctor was lying.
She spun around and grabbed the first thing her hand touched on the overturned metal tray-a pair of heavy, stainless-steel surgical scissors. She gripped the handles, pointing the sharp, curved blades directly at Dr. Carver's carotid artery. Her vision swam with black spots, her knees trembling so violently she nearly dropped the heavy steel.
Dr. Carver froze. He looked into Allegra's eyes and saw nothing but the rabid, unhinged violence of a mother backed into a corner. He slowly raised his hands and took a step back.
The nurse opened her mouth and screamed, spinning toward the red security alarm on the wall.
Allegra flipped the scissors, pressing the sharp tips hard against the soft skin of her own throat.
"Press it," Allegra hissed, her voice raw and grating. "Press it, and I will bleed out on this floor. And the Bartlett family will spend the next fifty years making sure this hospital is burned to the ground and you two rot in federal prison."
The nurse's hand hovered an inch from the button, trembling violently. Dr. Carver's face drained of color. He knew the power of the Bartlett money. He didn't move a muscle.
"Bring me a wheelchair," Allegra ordered, her chest heaving. "And the thickest cashmere blanket you have in that closet."
The nurse scrambled to obey, dragging a wheelchair over and tossing a heavy gray blanket onto the seat.
Allegra wrapped Rosalie tightly in the wool, hiding her completely. She kept the scissors gripped in her right hand, her knuckles bone-white, and dropped heavily into the wheelchair.
Out the door, take a hard left, the voice commanded. Avoid the main nurse's station. Head straight for the VIP private elevator!
Pain ripped through Allegra's fresh surgical stitches, hot and blinding, but she ignored it. She grabbed the wheels and pushed, rolling out of the delivery room and leaving the stunned medical staff behind.