Elizabeth’s body jerked in a series of violent convulsions, her face turning a dusky blue as though the very breath of life were slipping away.
Agony etched itself across her features, and her ragged scream ripped through the air, sending nurses and doctors scrambling to respond.
Alarms blared from both sides of her bed, the machines‘ frantic beeping echoing off the stark white walls, amplifying the sense of impending disaster.
“What on earth is happening?” Dr. Yorick’s complexion went pale, his eyes brimming with shock.
Jasmine’s expression hardened. “Explain this, Dr. Yorick!” she demanded, her voice laced with desperation.
“That can’t be right… She was stable just a few hours ago,” he muttered, unease creeping into his tone.
“Doctor, her heartbeat’s crashing!” a nurse shouted, voice high with urgency.
“Get the defibrillator–now!” the head doctor barked.
The medical team mobilized, hands flying as they fought to stabilize Elizabeth.
But no matter what they did, the numbers on the monitor kept freefalling.
Elizabeth’s chest stopped moving.
The monitor’s steady tone cut through the chaos, the cold, continuous beep of a flatline.
“Cardiac arrest!” someone cried. “We’re losing her!”
Jasmine’s breath caught, and tears gathered in her eyes as she clung to the bed’s railing. “No, please…”
Charles’s eyes narrowed.
Beneath his outward composure, he clenched his hand into a fist–something like triumph gleamed there.
“You son of a-!” Jasmine whirled on Dr. Yorick, fury shaking her voice.
She grabbed the doctor by his collar, nails digging in. “I told you not to pull out those needles! Now look
–
at her dying–and all you can do is babble? If you can’t save her, I’ll make sure you end up in the ground with her!”
Dr. Yorick’s face went a sickly white. “I… This isn’t on me!” he stammered. “It was that so–called healer! His needles did this!”
Jasmine’s hand flashed across his face with a sharp crack, jerking his head to the side. A red imprint bloomed on his cheek.
“Own your mistakes,” she spat, trembling with rage. “Start drafting your will, because if she dies, so do you.”
Dr. Yorick swallowed hard. He knew full well how powerful the Kingston family was–and that people could vanish without a trace.
Just then, the door flew open and Alex strode in.
His gaze swept across the chaos before settling on Elizabeth’s lifeless form.
“What happened?” he asked, his voice chilled by anger. “Didn’t I warn you not to take out those needles? Why didn’t you listen?”
Before Jasmine could answer, Dr. Yorick lunged at Alex seizing him by the collar.
“You’re the one who stuck those damn things in her!” he roared, voice cracking with desperation. “You killed her!”
Alex’s eyes were as cold as steel. “You removed them?”
Dr. Yorick’s sneer deepened. “I did. So what?”
Alex’s jaw tightened. “That was her death sentence–and yours.
“Is that a threat?”
Alex fixed Charles with a cool, penetrating state. “So you’re the one who brought in a fraud to undermine the real treatment. Hoping to snag your grandmother’s inheritance, are you?”
“How dare you!” Charles roared, his cheeks flushing with rage. “I love her more than anyone. Don’t you dare accuse me, you know nothing!”
Alex’s smirk was icy. “The only thing I know is that you won’t be inheriting anything tonight.”
Charles fell silent, his face twitching with tension.
Alex turned back to Elizabeth. “Since I’m here,” he said quietly, “she’ll live at least another two decades.”
From inside his coat, Alex retrieved a set of shining gold needles.
He moved swiftly, placing them at critical points along Elizabeth’s body, each needle glinting under the fluorescent lights.
Finally, he pressed his palm gently over her still heart where the doctors had failed to revive it.
For a moment, the room was filled only with the relentless drone of the flatline.
Then it twitched–once, twice–gradually falling into a steady thump.
A collective gasp swept through the onlookers as the monitors picked up a faint heartbeat. The sound grew stronger, each beat bringing Elizabeth back from the edge.
She lay there, no longer convulsing, her breathing now calm and even.
“This can’t be real,” murmured one doctor, eyes wide in disbelief.
“It’s a miracle,” a nurse said, her voice trembling with awe.
They all watched in stunned silence as Elizabeth, moments ago at death’s door, drew one peaceful breath after another, her heart monitor beeping a reassuring rhythm.
In the corner, someone whispered about an old legend a mysterious physician with hands like a gift from God. “The God’s hand.”

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