Chapter 32: Chapter 32: The Last Therapy
The conference room of Musutafu General Hospital was a cube of sterile despair. The merciless, white fluorescent light bleached the faces of everyone present, accentuating the dark circles under their eyes and the pallor of their exhaustion. It smelled of antiseptic and finality. In a corner, the imposing figure of All Might seemed to collapse in on himself. His broad back, usually a symbol of unbreakable hope, was hunched by a weight no villain could ever match. He was a silent spectator to the torture.
"The neurological damage is… massive," said the doctor, a middle-aged man with tired eyes that had seen too many tragedies. He adjusted his glasses, a nervous tic that failed to hide the tremor in his hands as he pointed to the brain scans on the screen. "The internal bleeding is uncontrollable. We've tried to stabilize him, but his body is undergoing a cascading systemic failure. Every organ is beginning to shut down."
"Can't you try something?" Inko's voice broke, a fragile thread in the clinical silence. "Anything! A surgery? He's just a boy!"
Recovery Girl, sitting beside her, placed a hand on Inko's trembling shoulder. Her usually cheerful face was a mask of professional grief. "Inko-san, I'm sorry. Using my Quirk on him right now… it would be like trying to fill a sieve. It would drain what little life force he has left. It would kill him instantly. It isn't an option. It's a death sentence."
"Experimental therapies?" Momo's voice was a sharp whisper, a last-ditch effort to impose logic onto chaos. She had stood up, her hero uniform stained with dried blood, a dark smudge against her natural elegance. "Nanotechnology? Any specialized cell-regeneration Quirks…?"
"Miss Yaoyorozu," the doctor interrupted her, with a gentleness that was crueler than any shout, "the life support we have him on is the only thing keeping him with us. His heart is still beating, but it's a mechanical function. There's no higher brain activity. Moving him, attempting any invasive procedure… that would be the end. It already is."
The doctor lowered his gaze, unable to continue meeting the eyes of a mother whose world was disintegrating. "The only thing we can do is… give you time. Time to say your goodbyes. I am so terribly sorry."
Ochako, sitting in a chair against the wall, said nothing. She didn't move. Her gaze was fixed on an empty spot on the floor. She wasn't processing the words, the denials, the science. Her mind was trapped in an infinite loop: the sound of Izuku's bones breaking, the blur of his body as it fell, the red stain spreading across the concrete.
The sound of Inko's weeping filled the room. It was a torn, broken sob that made All Might shrink even further in his corner, each tear a needle piercing his own guilt-ridden soul.
The only sound in the hospital room was the rhythmic, faint, and monotonous beep of the monitors. A metronome marking the final beats of a life. Izuku lay in the bed, pale, almost translucent. The white bandages covering his legs and abdomen were a brutal contrast against his pallid skin. A breathing tube covered his mouth, rising and falling with an inhuman regularity.
Inko sat beside him, in a vigil that had already lasted for hours. She straightened his sheet again and again, a useless gesture against the disarray of death. With a damp cloth, she wiped his forehead—a cold forehead that no longer sweat.
"Do you remember when you fell off that swing at the park?" she whispered, her voice hoarse from crying. "You scraped your knee and cried as if the world was ending. The cut was tiny, but you said your soul hurt." A broken laugh escaped her lips. "I kissed the wound, blew on it… and told you everything would be all right. And you believed me." She stroked his green hair, tangled and lifeless. "Why can't I make this all right, Izuku? Why can't my kiss heal this? Please, my baby boy… my little hero… just wake up. Mom's here…"
Standing by the window, Momo watched the numbers on the monitors. They were her only refuge, the only logic in a universe that had lost all meaning.
"Blood pressure is sixty over forty…" she whispered to herself, the data a mantra to keep hysteria at bay. "Oxygen saturation at ninety-two percent with mechanical assistance… Body temperature has dropped half a degree in the last hour… It's not sustainable. These are the vitals of a system that's giving up."
She squeezed her eyes shut. "It was my plan. My stupid, brilliant plan… I told you we could do it… and I led you to this." She clenched her fists, her knuckles white. "I'm sorry, Izuku. I'm so sorry. I swear to you… I will be a hero worthy of your sacrifice. I won't let your faith in me be in vain."
In the farthest corner, on an orange plastic chair that clashed with the solemnity of the moment, Ochako hugged her knees to her chest. She wasn't crying. She wasn't speaking. She was simply watching. Her empty gaze was fixed on Izuku's face.
In her mind, the film never stopped. The Nomu's fist. The shattered titanium shield. The wet, final sound. Izuku's body falling. The blood. The blood everywhere. And then… the rage. The cold, white rage that had hollowed her out, that had turned her into a killer. The guilt for having killed and the pain of having lost him had canceled each other out, leaving an absolute void. A deafening silence.
Afternoon turned to evening. The lights in the hallway dimmed, plunging the room into a bluish gloom. The murmurs of the nurses at the shift change faded away. Room 302 was no longer a priority; it was the room of a lost cause, a waiting room for the morgue.
Overcome by physical and emotional exhaustion, the three women had fallen asleep in their chairs. Inko, her head resting on the edge of the bed, her hand still clinging to her son's. Momo, slumped in her chair by the window, her impeccable posture finally broken by grief. And Ochako, curled in on herself in her corner, a statue of trauma in the darkness.
The silence was absolute, broken only by the soft beep of the heart monitor. A beep that, with each passing hour, seemed a little slower, a little weaker.
The sound shattered the stillness of the early morning. A rhythmic click-clack, sharp and strangely cheerful on the silent linoleum of the hallway. High heels. The sound stopped right in front of the door to Room 302.
The door opened without a single creak, as if pushed by a ghost. A figure slipped inside. It was a nurse. Her white uniform was spotless, her cap was perfectly placed, and a surgical mask covered the lower half of her face. But there was something strange in the smile her eyes hinted at. A feline, predatory glint.
Himiko Toga observed the scene with quiet curiosity. She saw the three sleeping women, castaways in a sea of grief. A fleeting expression, something like compassion or perhaps understanding, crossed her face. She saw Ochako and recognized the empty rage. She saw Momo and recognized the paralyzing guilt.
She approached the bed. Her smile vanished when she saw Izuku's condition. The waxy pallor, the tubes, the bandages stained with dried blood. She reached out a hand and, with the back of her fingers, caressed his cheek. It was cold.
"Look how they've left you, my hero…" she whispered, her voice a murmur barely audible over the monitor's beep. "My coach… You promised you'd help me. What terrible customer service it would be if you died now, don't you think? I'll have to leave you a very bad review."
Toga moved with a ritualistic deliberation. She took off her mask and placed it on the bedside table. Then, she began to unbutton her nurse's uniform, slowly and methodically. It wasn't a striptease; it was the preparation for a desperate surgery. The uniform fell to the floor in a silent heap.
Completely naked, she lifted the sheet covering Izuku. The contrast between her body, warm and vibrant with life, and his, cold, broken, and nearly without it, was brutal. She slipped into the bed and curled up beside him, seeking skin-to-skin contact. Her warmth against the coldness of impending death.
"You said your Quirk needed contact…" she whispered, her warm breath brushing against Izuku's ear. "That it worked better with… 'energy reserves.' You said mine was a flaw in the system… that my addiction was a programming error that needed a catalyst to be corrected. Well…"
She leaned in and kissed him. It was a deep, passionate, desperate kiss. She wasn't looking for a response; there was no lust in the gesture. It was an attempt to force a connection, to build a bridge between life and nothingness. Her lips moved over his, cold and inert, trying to infuse him with her own vitality.
When she pulled away, she took Izuku's limp hand—the left one, which wasn't connected to the IV. With a delicacy that contradicted her chaotic nature, she guided it to her own chest, placing his cold palm over her right breast. Goosebumps prickled her skin at the contact.
She closed her eyes, her face contorting into a mask of superhuman concentration.
"It's my turn to be the coach," she murmured. "You gave me the manual for my Quirk. Now let me use it to rewrite yours."
She pressed Izuku's hand harder against her chest.
"Come on, you stupid, perverted Quirk…" she thought, her mind a silent scream. "Work! You have to work! Don't read my manual… rewrite his! Give him something! Give him… whatever I have! The coach needs a coach! Work, damn it!"
For a moment, nothing happened. Only the faint, steady beep of the heart monitor.
And then, it happened.
A faint greenish light, the characteristic color of Izuku's energy, began to flicker. It didn't emanate from him. It emanated from Toga. The light was born in the center of her chest, right beneath Izuku's hand. It pulsed once, faintly, and flowed through his hand, a river of green energy that entered his inert body.
The beep of the heart monitor faltered.
Then, a red light, the color of blood, seemed to return from Izuku to Toga, completing a cycle.
Beep.
The green light pulsed from her again, a little stronger this time. The red returned.
Beep.
A rhythmic pulse. Green to him, red to her. A cycle. A reverse transfusion of life and power, synchronized with the faint beat of a heart that refused to stop.
Beep… Beep… Beep…