The Surgeon's Revenge From Shadow to SpotlightChapter 1

In my eighth year as Adrian Henson's assistant, I found the notebook he never let out of his sight.

The pages meant for complex case notes were filled with nothing but fawning over that useless junior.

[Lily's hands shook during her first suture today—like a startled rabbit. Adorable.]

[I saved that mitral valve repair for her to practice. She failed, cried, and it broke my heart.]

[Skipped that craniotomy to spend Lily's birthday with her. Boring case anyway.]

I stared at those words. My blood ran cold.

The "boring case" he'd skipped—that patient was my father.

Eight years of loyalty crumbled in an instant.

——

The locker room door banged open. Adrian strode in, grinning.

I locked eyes with him, voice shaking:

"That craniotomy you rejected—you said the patient's vitals were off. But really, it was because you had to celebrate Lily Fox's birthday?"

He paused. Then adjusted his tie with an impatient sigh, his tone dripping self-righteousness.

"Lily just joined the department. She's fragile—needs support. Your dad can wait two days. What's the big deal?"

"Two days?"

I echoed the words.

"Adrian, that's my father. Brainstem hemorrhage—every minute is a fight against death. And you're telling me two days won't matter?"

He frowned, clearly irritated by the pushback.

He turned and looked down at me, voice sharp with authority.

"You're a doctor, Wendy. Act like one."

"Unstable vitals mean no surgery. Did you even read the risk assessment?"

"I'm protecting the patient. Keep your personal drama out of this."

Before today, I might have believed him.

After all, he was the dual-specialty prodigy—Sacred Heart's golden boy in both cardiac and neurosurgery.

But now, every line in that notebook was a slap across my face.

"Protecting the patient?"

I laughed—hollow, bitter. My finger jabbed toward his pocket.

"Protection means bumping a critical surgery so you can throw your protégé a birthday party?"

"Protection means deciding a craniotomy is too boring—not worth missing your junior's smile?"

"Put your hand on your heart and say that again. I dare you."

His expression went ice-cold.

"You went through my diary?"

"I was looking for my father's chart!"

"Enough."

He cut me off, disgust plain on his face.

"Right now? You sound like some bitter, paranoid ex."