Part 2
The standoff was abruptly shattered by the frantic squawk of the police radio on Hayes’s shoulder.
“Dispatch to all units, Code 3 emergency at 5th and Main. Hit-and-run involving a minor. Victim is a twelve-year-old male, critical condition, en route to St. Jude’s. Suspect vehicle fled the scene.”
Hayes froze, the weapon trembling in his raised hand. 5th and Main. That was only three blocks from his house. A cold, suffocating dread washed over his face, draining the furious red from his cheeks.
Marcus didn’t waste a single second. Seizing the officer’s moment of paralyzed distraction, he violently shoved past Hayes, diving back into his Audi. He slammed the door, hit the ignition, and floored the gas pedal. The car fishtailed violently, kicking up a storm of dust and gravel as it tore down the highway, leaving the stunned officer standing alone in the dark.
Ten minutes later, Marcus sprinted through the automatic doors of St. Jude’s Trauma Center. His scrubs were stained with dirt and grease, his wrist bruised from the struggle, but his mind was completely locked in.
“Vitals!” Marcus yelled, crashing through the swinging doors of Operating Room 1.
“BP is 60 over 40 and dropping! He’s in hypovolemic shock, Dr. Vance!” yelled Nurse Collins, tossing Marcus a sterile gown and gloves.
On the table lay a boy, his small, fragile body broken and battered. His chest was entirely covered in blood, his breathing shallow and erratic. Marcus scrubbed in with lightning speed, ignoring the agonizing throb in his own shoulder.
“Scalpel,” Marcus ordered, stepping up to the table.
The next two hours were a brutal, bloody war against the ticking clock. The boy’s spleen was shattered, and a jagged piece of his ribs had punctured a major artery. The monitors screamed a constant, terrifying rhythm.
“He’s crashing! Heart rate dropping to thirty!” the anesthesiologist shouted.
“Push one of epi! Don’t you dare die on me, kid. Not today!” Marcus growled, his hands submerged in the boy’s chest cavity, desperately searching for the source of the arterial bleed. Blood soaked through Marcus’s gloves, spraying across his surgical mask. He could feel the boy’s life slipping away, a fading pulse fluttering like a dying bird under his fingertips.
Suddenly, Marcus’s fingers brushed against something cold and metallic tangled in the bloody fabric of the boy’s torn shirt. He pulled it aside to get a clearer view of the wound. It was a heavy silver chain. Dangling from it was a miniature, custom-made police badge. Engraved on the metal were the words: To Tommy. My Little Hero. Love, Dad.
Marcus’s blood ran ice cold. He stared at the bruised, pale face of the boy. The realization hit him like a freight train. This was the son of the officer who had nearly cost this child his life.
“Got it! Clamping the artery now!” Marcus shouted, forcing his personal shock down and focusing entirely on the flesh and blood beneath his hands. “Give me suction!”