The ER Nurse’s Forbidden Word Made a SEAL’s War Dog Freeze-nga9999 - Chainityai

The ER Nurse’s Forbidden Word Made a SEAL’s War Dog Freeze-nga9999

The red laser dot was shaking on the German Shepherd’s chest.

Not on the man bleeding out beneath him.

Not on the cracked white tile where fever sweat had already pooled under his neck.

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On the dog.

One wrong movement, one frightened squeeze from the hospital security guard, and Titan would go down in the middle of the emergency room lobby.

“Sir, call off your dog!” the guard shouted, both hands locked around the taser. “Call him off now!”

The man on the floor tried to lift his head.

His name was Ethan Maddox, though almost nobody in that ER knew it yet.

He was broad-shouldered and bearded, dressed in a weathered dark jacket, jeans, and snow-dusted boots, the kind of man people stepped around before they even knew why.

His left pant leg was soaked dark from knee to thigh.

The skin above his boot had swollen tight and red, and a thin crimson line had started traveling upward beneath his jeans.

The young doctor crouched ten feet away and knew exactly what that line meant.

Infection in the blood.

Sepsis.

A clock already running.

But Ethan Maddox was not looking at the doctor.

He was looking at the red dot.

He had seen enough red dots in his life to know what came after them.

With a sound that was half growl and half ruined breath, Ethan rolled onto his side and threw one arm around the German Shepherd’s neck.

“No,” he rasped. “You fire that thing, I’ll break your hand.”

The lobby went still.

Titan stood over Ethan like a living barricade.

Ninety pounds of black-and-tan muscle, scarred muzzle pulled back, one torn ear angled toward the guard, tactical harness dusted with snow from the parking lot.

His front paws were planted on either side of Ethan’s ribs.

His amber eyes moved from the doctor to the guard to the receptionist behind the glass.

Distance.

Threat.

Angle.

Titan had been trained to read rooms faster than men could lie in them.

The automatic doors behind them kept opening and closing, letting in strips of January wind from the Spokane night.

Snowflakes skittered across the tile and melted beside Ethan’s hand.

The lobby smelled like antiseptic, wet coats, burnt coffee, and fear.

A mother near triage pulled her little girl against her chest.

A man in a work jacket backed into the wall.

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