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"The Blood He Waited For" Chapter 5

The glass facade of Valmont Memorial Hospital loomed over the city like a polished monolith. Inside, the air lacked the heavy, metallic scent of the county clinics Vivienne usually frequented. It smelled of ozone and expensive filtration.

Vivienne adjusted her stethoscope, her fingers brushing the plastic ID badge clipped to her blue scrubs.

After the confrontation with Professor Cross and the impossible data on the pathology reports, the sterile environment felt less like a sanctuary and more like a cage.

She kept her head down, weaving through the morning rush of white-coated residents and humming diagnostic droids. The "Non-Human Origin" flags from her bloodwork played on a loop in her mind, a digital ghost she couldn't outrun.

"Whitmore. Focus."

Adrian Blackwood stepped into her path, a tablet tucked under one arm. He looked at her, his hazel eyes scanning her face with a precision that went beyond a mentor's concern. He reached out, his hand hovering near her shoulder before dropping back to his side.

"You're pale, Vivienne. The Valmont rotation is high-pressure, but I didn't expect you to look like you're prepping for your own autopsy," Adrian said, his voice a low, steady hum.

Vivienne forced a smile, her facial muscles tight. "Just... caffeine withdrawal, Dr. Blackwood. I'm heading to the ICU for the morning rounds."

"Take the service bank. The main elevators are backed up with the board members," Adrian gestured toward a set of brushed-steel doors at the end of the corridor. "And Vivienne... stay sharp. The Valmonts don't just fund this place. They watch it."

She nodded, her heels clicking on the linoleum as she moved away. The service elevator stood open, a silent, silver maw. She stepped inside and pressed the button for the fourth floor.

The doors began to slide shut.

A pale, gloved hand stopped them.

The sensors hissed. The doors retreated.

Evander Valmont stepped into the car.

He wore a tailored white overcoat that seemed to catch every photon of the overhead LED strips, making him look like a focal point in a blurred world. His silver-white hair was brushed back, revealing the sharp, aristocratic lines of his face—cheekbones like glass, a jawline that suggested a centuries-old discipline. The air in the small enclosure dropped several degrees. It carried the scent of mountain air and something ancient... something like snow falling on cold stone.

The doors sealed.

The elevator surged upward.

Vivienne stared at the digital floor counter. 4... 5... 6...

A violent shudder racked the car. A sound like a terminal groan echoed through the shaft. The elevator lurched, throwing Vivienne toward the corner. Her hand slammed against the rail, her knuckles turning white as she gripped the cold metal.

The lights flickered once, twice, and died.

A moment later, the dim, pulsing red of the emergency system hummed to life. The ventilation cut out. The silence that followed was heavy, a physical weight pressing against her eardrums.

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"We're stuck," Vivienne whispered, her breath hitching. She reached for the emergency phone. She clicked the receiver. Dead air. She hammered the call button. Nothing.

In the center of the car, Evander hadn't moved. He stood with a magnetic stillness, his hands clasped behind his back. He didn't look at the panel. He didn't look at the doors.

He looked at her.

"The mechanical override will engage in seven minutes," Evander said. His voice was a velvet rasp that seemed to vibrate the very air between them.

Vivienne's fingers twisted the cord of her stethoscope. She remained anchored in the corner, her back flat against the cold steel panel. 

Evander tilted his head. The movement was slow, calculated. "I am observing a variable, Miss Whitmore. One that does not align with the records."

"The records?" Vivienne's brow pinched. She looked at the dead control panel, then back at the man in white, her head tilting in genuine confusion. "I don't... I don't follow. My transcript is in the Dean's office. It's all very standard. Biochemistry. Anatomy. There shouldn't be any... variables."

Evander took a half-step closer. The temperature in the car plummeted. Vivienne's breath hitched, a visible puff of mist forming in the dim, red emergency light. 

Evander didn't blink. He tracked the movement of her chest. He studied the sharp line of her jaw and the confusion clouding her grey-green eyes.

A sharp, modern temper that bore no resemblance to the yielding girl in his memories. 

He pulled his hand back, his white glove creaking as he made a fist. A tremor shook his shoulders, a flicker of something raw breaking through the ice of his expression.

"You are nothing like the records suggest," he murmured. 

Vivienne's tongue darted out to lick her dry lips. She glanced at the closed doors, then back at him, her head shaking slightly. "I'm just a medical student, Count. I... I belong on the fourth floor. I think you have me confused with someone else."

Evander's expression shifted—a flicker of something that looked like heartbreak before the mask of stone returned.

He straightened, the formal distance restored.

"Listen to me carefully," he said, his voice dropping to a frequency that felt like a command. "The rules of this hospital are designed for safety. But safety is a relative term. Protocols for blood draws are established for a reason."

Vivienne frowned. "I know how to label a vial, Count."

"This is not about labels." Evander's eyes locked onto hers with a terrifying intensity. "If anyone—any physician, any administrator, any stranger—asks you for a blood sample outside of an official, documented hospital procedure... you will refuse."

Vivienne's pulse throbbed at the base of her throat—a visible, frantic rhythm. "The 'anomalies' in my lab work... is that what this is about?" Her voice wavered, a ghost of a sound in the silent shaft.

"Textbooks describe a world that doesn't exist," Evander said. "The real one is hungry".

A heavy jolt rattled the car. The motor hummed. Blinding white light replaced the red emergency glow, making Vivienne squint. The elevator moved.

Vivienne exhaled, a jagged, shaky breath. She stepped back, the restoration of the world of logic and light feeling like a temporary reprieve.

Ding.

The doors chimed and slid open on the fourth floor.

The ICU was a blur of activity. Nurses moved with purpose; monitors beeped in a rhythmic, comforting cadence.

Adrian was standing by the desk, his head snapping up as the elevator opened. He moved toward them, his eyes darting between Vivienne's flushed face and Evander's untouchable calm. His posture was rigid, his jaw set in a hard line.

Evander stepped out of the car first. He didn't look back. He walked several paces down the hall, his white coat billowing slightly, a stark, monochromatic figure against the beige walls.

He stopped. He didn't turn around.

"One more thing, Vivienne," he said. His voice carried over the hospital noise with an unnatural clarity. "If anyone asks for your blood... call me first."

He turned the corner and vanished.

Vivienne stood frozen, her hand going to the pocket of her scrubs. She felt her smartphone there, heavy and cold. A jolt of sharp, icy dread settled in her stomach.

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