Rookie Nurse Saved A Navy SEAL, Then The FBI Hunted Her By Dawn-mdue - Chainityai

Rookie Nurse Saved A Navy SEAL, Then The FBI Hunted Her By Dawn-mdue

The laundry chute swallowed Abigail Preston whole.

For one weightless second, there was no hospital, no FBI, no Commander Reed, no dying Navy SEAL with gray eyes and a bloody secret. There was only metal shrieking against her sleeves, stale bleach in her throat, and the cold fact that if the linen cart below had been rolled away, the story would end before anyone learned why she had run.

She hit wet cloth instead of concrete.

Image

The impact crushed the breath from her lungs. Abigail lay buried in damp sheets and surgical towels, staring up at the black square far above her while boots thundered into the locker room she had just left. A voice shouted her name. Another ordered the chute checked. She forced air back into her chest, rolled over the side of the cart, and landed on her hands and knees in the sub-basement.

Every part of her body wanted to stay down.

The flash drive against her skin said otherwise.

The loading dock glowed red and blue through frosted glass. Police cruisers were already outside. Dogs barked. Radios crackled. Abigail staggered away from the doors and found the old steel entrance marked for the morgue tunnels. Providence Memorial had been built during an era when hospitals connected to nearby campuses through maintenance passages, steam routes, and concrete corridors no one used unless something had gone wrong.

Something had gone wrong enough.

She swiped her badge.

The reader blinked green.

Abigail slipped through, dead-bolted the door behind her, and ran into the heat beneath Anchorage.

The tunnels smelled of rust, water, and old dust baked by steam pipes. Her phone flashlight jumped over peeling arrows and service numbers painted on concrete walls. Above her, tons of building swallowed the sirens into a muffled, animal sound. Every drip sounded like a footstep. Every pipe groan sounded like someone saying her name.

She had no home to go to. Reed would already have agents at her apartment. Her bank cards would be flagged. Her face would be on every security bulletin in Alaska by breakfast. She had one thing of value, and she did not even know what was on it.

But she knew who might.

Evelyn Hayes, the head nurse, had a nephew at Anchorage University. Simon Hayes. Cybersecurity graduate student. Brilliant, paranoid, and according to Evelyn, “the kind of kid who covers his laptop camera with three layers of tape because one makes him feel lazy.”

Abigail followed the tunnel map until a maintenance ladder led up into the university’s science building. The grate fought her. She pushed until her shoulders screamed, then it popped loose and clanged against tile. She climbed into a janitor’s closet, pulled her parka tight over blood-stiff scrubs, and stepped into a quiet hallway where the rest of the world still believed it was an ordinary morning.

She walked with a limp on purpose.

It slowed her down, but it changed her gait beneath the cameras. She kept her head low, hair half over her face, and found the basement server lab by following the hum.

Simon Hayes opened the door after her third frantic knock. He was tall, thin, hollow-eyed, and wearing the expression of someone who had been awake for either two hours or two days.

“Evelyn sent me,” Abigail said.

“No, she didn’t,” Simon whispered. “The police band is calling you an assassin.”

Abigail pulled the titanium drive from beneath her shirt.

Simon stopped breathing for a beat.

“The man they say I tried to kill gave me this,” she said. “The men guarding him are the ones who want him dead.”

Fear moved across Simon’s face first. Curiosity followed it. Then the kind of moral discomfort that comes when a person realizes cowardice will not keep them clean.

He let her in.

The server room was freezing, loud, and blue with machine light. Simon locked the door behind them, pulled an old laptop from a drawer, and physically disabled its wireless connection before he would touch the drive. Abigail watched his hands shake as he slid it into the port.

The screen asked for a biometric signature or an override code.

Simon tried three careful things and cursed under his breath.

“This is not commercial encryption,” he said. “This is a wall with teeth.”

Abigail closed her eyes. Her mind went back to the trauma bay. Wyatt’s hand around her wrist. The dog tag against his chest. Brooks Wyatt. O positive. A string beneath the blood type.

She recited it.

Simon typed.

The drive flashed red, then yellow, then green.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *