Hospital Debauchery

Chapter 70: Suture and Salvation II



As Devon adjusted his stance, preparing to dive into the surgical fray, his surgical gown hugging his athletic frame, his gloved hands hovering at the ready as he prepared to initiate the repair.

The System's Surgical Omniscience coursed through his thoughts like an electric current, granting him flawless recall of every technique, from standard CABG protocols to advanced interventions for aortic complications his dexterity enhanced, his decisions instantaneous, promising to slash operation time by 30% and complications to near zero.

He adjusted the suction wand in his grip, eyes scanning the field for his entry point, when he paused, lifting his head with deliberate slowness. His dark gaze swept the room like a spotlight, pinning each team member in turn, the scrub techs clutching instruments with white-knuckled grips, the doctor at the anesthesia station monitoring the ventilator with furrowed brow, the circulating nurse pacing a tight circle near the supply cart. Finally, his eyes landed on Helena, who lingered near the back wall, her scrub cap crooked, her mask saturated with fresh tears, her entire body radiating the raw agony of her error a nurse on the verge of emotional implosion.

A soft smile curved Devon's lips beneath his mask, warm and reassuring, a quiet oasis in the storm. "Helena," he said, his voice a gentle murmur that sliced through the monitors' wail like a soothing melody, low and intimate. "Step out for a minute. Catch your breath, we've got this."

Helena's reaction was immediate, her eyes widening in shock behind her fogged visor, confusion etching deep lines on her forehead. "Devon, no I can't," she protested, her voice fracturing, hands gesturing wildly as if to ward off the command. "This is my fault, I need to see it through. Please, let me stay I can help, I swear." Her insistence bordered on desperation, her body language screaming resistance, as if leaving would cement her failure in stone.

But Devon's smile vanished, replaced by a firm, penetrating glare his eyes narrowing with an authority that brooked no debate, a silent command that pierced her resolve. Helena's shoulders sagged, the fight draining from her like air from a punctured balloon. With a defeated nod, she turned toward the double doors, her footsteps heavy and echoing, each one a reluctant retreat.

The doors hissed shut behind her, leaving a palpable void in the room, the tension shifting like a tide.

Dr Elias Thorne, positioned across the table with his arms crossed over his broad chest, let out a derisive snort, his beard twitching with irritation beneath his mask. His voice boomed, laced with the cynicism of a veteran surgeon who'd seen too many miracles fizzle out.

"This is a complete waste of time, Devon," he barked, gesturing sharply at the blood-soaked field and the faltering monitors.

"You don't know what you're diving into here, it's a goddamn mess. I've thrown everything at it, and it's slipping away. Don't play the hero thinking you can raise the dead or pull off some magic trick. Sit this one out before you drag us all down with your ego." His words were a gauntlet thrown, heavy with frustration and a hint of wounded pride, his glare challenging Devon to respond.

Devon didn't so much as glance Thorne's way, his focus locked on the patient's exposed chest, mentally mapping the repair sequence: evacuate the hematoma, reinforce the aortic wall with a patch, complete the bypass grafts. Thorne's tirade was white noise, irrelevant against the precision unfolding in Devon's mind.

With a furious huff, Thorne yanked off his gloves, slamming them into the biohazard bin with a resounding smack that reverberated through the room. "Suit yourself, hotshot," he muttered, storming toward the doors, his bulky frame shoving them open with a force that made the hinges groan. The doors swung shut, sealing the operating room into a tighter, more focused arena, the remaining team exchanging uneasy glances as the weight of the moment settled heavier.

Beyond the operating room words had raced through Blissville's corridors like an electric current, Devon Aldridge, was tackling a doomed case, a patient mere breaths from oblivion. They pressed close to the glass, their reflections ghostly in the pane, breaths fogging it as they strained to watch, a silent chorus bearing witness to what could be triumph or tragedy.

Devon nodded calmly to the nurse, who passed him a 7-0 prolene suture needle with the solemnity of a ritual offering. "Let's begin," he said, his voice steady as granite, and the operation ignited. First, he called for enhanced suction, the wand hissing as it evacuated the pericardial hematoma the accumulated blood compressing the heart like a vice.

The team watched, transfixed, as his hands moved with balletic grace, fingers threading the needle through the friable aortic tissue. "Interrupted sutures here," he instructed, placing each stitch with pinpoint accuracy, the prolene weaving a secure lattice to close the tear. Tension rippled through the room; Patel murmured updates "BP holding at 65/35, but sats dipping to 82%" his voice tight, the anesthesiologist's eyes darting between screens and Devon's unflinching focus.

Outside, the crowd leaned in closer, a resident whispering, "He's not even breaking a sweat look at that precision."

Devon transitioned seamlessly to the Dacron patch graft, trimming it to size with a swift snip of the scissors, then suturing it over the dissected aortic wall for reinforcement, his movements economical yet mesmerizing.

"Watch the tension too much, and it tears, too little, and it leaks," he said, his tone educational, pulling the team into the rhythm. The monitors responded tentatively, heart rate easing to 140, oxygen saturation inching up to 85% eliciting gasps from the observers, their faces alight with dawning amazement. "He's stabilizing it," a nurse breathed, her hand pressed to the glass.

The procedure unfolded like a meticulously choreographed dance, Devon harvested an additional saphenous vein graft from the prep table, anastomosing it to the right coronary artery with a running suture that sealed flawlessly on the first pass. Tension built as he addressed the left anterior descending artery, his needle driver twirling like an extension of his will, the graft flowing blood anew. "Bypass complete ween off the machine slowly," he directed, and Patel complied, the pump's hum fading as the patient's heart took over, its rhythm strengthening beat by beat.

The crowd outside erupted in muffled cheers, a resident pumping his fist, "Unreal, he's turning it around!"

Minutes blurred into a taut eternity, the OR thick with anticipation, every beep a potential harbinger. Yet Devon remained an island of calm, his neutral expression unchanging, sweat barely beading on his brow as he placed the final chest tube and closed the sternotomy with wire cerclage, the ribs clicking back into place like puzzle pieces. The monitors sang victory, BP 95/65, heart rate 98, sats 96%.

A ragged breath escaped the patient's lips, steady and unassisted, and the room exploded in applause gloved hands clapping in muffled thunder, the team's faces beaming with incredulous joy.

They had just borne witness to sheer brilliance, a resurrection from the brink, executed with such effortless mastery that it bordered on the supernatural. Devon nodded once, stripping off his gloves with a casual snap, his face still impassive, as if he'd merely tied a shoelace.

"Exceptional teamwork, all of you," he said, his voice warm and inclusive, though the truth lingered unspoken: this was his orchestration, a solo symphony with them as the appreciative ensemble. "We pulled it off together well done."

The echoes of applause followed him as he moved toward the doors, the crowd beyond parting like a wave, their eyes wide with reverence.


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