Hospital Debauchery

Chapter 69: Suture and Salvation I



The double doors of Operating Room 3 swung shut behind Devon with a soft hiss, sealing him into a world of sterile precision and controlled chaos. The surgical suite was a crucible of light and sound, blinding overhead lamps cast a stark, unforgiving glow over the operating table, their beams slicing through the haze of antiseptic and blood. The rhythmic beeps of failing monitors clashed with the frantic rustle of blue surgical drapes, the low hum of the ventilator, and the muted gasps of a team teetering on the edge of despair.

Crimson-soaked gauze littered the floor, and the air was heavy with the metallic tang of blood, undercut by the sharp bite of iodine and the faint chemical whiff of sterile gloves.

Every face in the room were masked, goggled, tense snapped toward Devon as he entered, their eyes flaring with a desperate hope that bordered on reverence. Even Dr Elias Thorne, Chief of Emergency Medicine, whose hair peeked from beneath his cap like a storm cloud, betrayed a fleeting spark of relief. For a heartbeat, his weathered features softened, the lines of exhaustion easing as if Devon's mere presence was a lifeline. But the moment passed, and a wry smirk twisted Thorne's lips, his pride warring with the grim reality, this case was a runaway train, and even a surgeon of Devon's caliber might not stop it.

The patient was a middle-aged man undergoing a triple coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) lay exposed on the table, his chest cracked open in a sternotomy, ribs held apart by retractors like an open book. His heart, a quivering mass of tissue, struggled beneath a tide of blood, the surgical field a chaotic swirl of crimson and blue drapes.

Helena's catastrophic mistake had set the disaster in motion. Distracted, she'd handed Thorne a straight vascular clamp instead of the angled one critical for the delicate aortic anastomosis. The slip born of a fleeting lapse in focus had caused the clamp to skid, nicking the ascending aorta and unleashing a torrent of hemorrhage.

The tear had spiraled into a dissection, blood pooling around the heart, compressing it into near-arrest cardiac tamponade threatening to snuff out the patient's life. Thorne, with his decades of battle-scarred expertise, had thrown every trick at it, additional clamps, frenzied sutures, boluses of fluids, and blood transfusions.

But the damage was a relentless cascade, the monitors screaming their verdict, BP cratering at 65/35, heart rate spiking to 150 with erratic ventricular salvos.

The patient was slipping away, and Thorne's glare at Helena was a blade of pure rage, his eyes blazing behind his visor like twin furnaces. How could you let this happen? his look seemed to scream, his fists clenching beneath bloodied gloves, his shoulders rigid with the weight of failure.

Helena stood frozen near the instrument tray, her scrub cap askew, her mask soaked with tears that streaked down to her jaw. Her hands trembled, spattered with blood, as if the weight of her mistake had stained her very skin. The room's chaos seemed to orbit her guilt, her breaths hitching audibly behind the fabric.

When her red-rimmed eyes caught Devon's entrance, she jolted as if electrified, rushing toward him with the desperation of a drowning soul.

She grabbed his arm, her gloved fingers digging into his white coat, her voice a fractured plea that cut through the beeping monitors like a cry in the wilderness. "Devon, please save him," she choked, her words tumbling over each other, raw and ragged. "I screwed up, I know I did, but he can't die because of me. I'll do anything, anything you want just don't let him go. Please, I'm begging you." Her tears spilled freely now, her body trembling so violently that her grip faltered, and she clutched him tighter, as if he were her only anchor in the storm.

Devon held her gaze for a long, suspended moment, his face an enigmatic mask dark eyes deep and unreadable, jaw set in a line that betrayed neither judgment nor panic. The room seemed to pause, the frenetic energy hushing as if the universe itself waited for his response.

The weight of Helena's desperation, Thorne's simmering frustration, and the team's fading hope pressed against him, yet he remained a still point in the chaos. Gently, he pried her hands from his arm, his touch firm but kind, and turned toward the operating table. His steps were measured, deliberate, each one echoing with purpose as he approached the patient, the surgical field a grim tableau of blood and faltering life.

He leaned in, his eyes sweeping the exposed chest with a predator's precision, cataloging every detail, the retractors pinning back ribs, the heart's erratic quiver, the crimson tide pooling around the aorta, the tangle of tubes and monitors screaming their warnings. The team watched, transfixed, their breaths held as if witnessing a miracle in the making. Mouths gaped behind masks, visors fogging with awe, as Devon's voice cut through the silence, calm and commanding, like a maestro calling an orchestra to order. "Triple coronary artery bypass graft for severe multivessel disease left anterior descending, right coronary, and circumflex arteries blocked," he said, his tone as steady as a metronome.

"Complicated by an iatrogenic aortic dissection from a misplaced clamp straight instead of angled causing a 2-centimeter tear in the ascending aorta. Resulting hemorrhage has led to tamponade, with blood pressure at 65/35, heart rate 150, and early ventricular tachycardia. We're minutes from full arrest if we don't act now."

The room erupted in stunned silence, then a collective gasp rippled through the team. Thorne's smirk vanished, replaced by a flicker of disbelief, his eyes narrowing as if questioning reality itself. No chart, no briefing just a glance, and he's nailed the diagnosis? Even Helena, her tears momentarily forgotten, stared wide-eyed, her despair eclipsed by the sheer impossibility of his insight.

"Unbelievable." Devon didn't pause for their astonishment; he stepped closer, his gloved hands hovering over the surgical field, assessing the damage with a clarity that felt almost supernatural.

"The clamp error started the bleed," he said, pointing to the jagged tear in the aorta, his voice instructional but devoid of blame. "Straight clamp slipped on the vessel's curve, nicking it clean. But that's not the whole story." His gaze flicked to Thorne, not accusing but correcting with surgical precision.

"The initial repair attempt used a running suture on the proximal anastomosis too much tension on tissue already compromised by dissection. It's pulling apart, worsening the tear. We need interrupted sutures for better control, and a patch graft to reinforce the aortic wall. Without it, we're just plugging a dam with tissue paper."

Thorne bristled, his pride stung, but his response was gruff rather than defensive. "I've been sewing up hearts since you were in diapers, Cole. That suture was by the book—"

"Books get rewritten," Devon cut in smoothly, his tone even, almost collegial, but with an edge of unyielding certainty. "We adapt, or we lose. No one's perfect, Elias not you, not me, not Helena. We fix it together." His words were a bridge, not a barb, pulling the team into alignment without fracturing their fragile morale.

He turned to the circulating nurse, a young woman whose hands trembled slightly as she anticipated his needs. "Gloves, size 8. Fresh gown, stat. And prep a patch, 2 by 3 centimeters."

Sarah moved with the speed of someone who'd just been handed a divine command, passing him the gloves with a reverence that bordered on worship. Devon donned them with practiced ease, the latex snapping over his hands like a second skin, the gown tied swiftly behind him by an aide who moved in sync, as if choreographed. The System's Surgical Omniscience surged in his mind, a mythic archive of every technique known to medicine flooding his thoughts microsurgery, experimental grafts, procedures not yet published. His hands, primed with preternatural dexterity, were ready to reduce complication rates to near zero, his presence in the OR radiating a confidence that steadied the team like a heartbeat.

He positioned himself at the table, the monitors frantic beeps a grim metronome, the patient's life hanging by a thread. Devon met the team's eyes one by one Thorne's reluctant respect, Helena's tearful hope, Patel's steady nod, the scrub techs' wide-eyed anticipation. A faint, confident smile curved beneath his mask, a spark of charisma that turned the sterile room into a stage.

"Shall we?" he said, his voice a low, inviting challenge, as if daring death itself to step into the ring.


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