17/05/2026
Too Bruised to Stand, the Mafia Boss Collapsed—Then He Became My First Human Patient
Just half a minute before I was supposed to lock up the clinic for the night, a heavy fist began hammering against the front door.
It was not a polite knock. It was frantic, violent, terrifying. The kind of sound that told my brain to run the other way.
My fingers stopped over the lock. Behind the frosted glass window, I saw a large, unsteady silhouette. The banging came again, softer this time, followed by a gut-wrenching groan that sent a chill down my spine.
“We’re closed,” I shouted, cursing the tremor in my own voice. “The emergency room is 15 miles up the highway.”
“Please,” a muffled voice begged from the other side. “They’ll kill me if I go there.”
My duty as a healer battled hard against basic survival instinct. I was isolated in the Oregon countryside at 10:45 on a Tuesday night, completely alone. Still, the raw panic in his tone sounded genuine. It was not manipulation. It was a plea for life.
I turned the handle and opened the door.
A giant of a man pitched forward, and I barely managed to hold him up. My 113-pound frame struggled against a man who was easily 6’3” and built like a tank. Crimson stained a pristine white dress shirt that looked expensive enough to cover my lease. His face was pale beneath olive skin, his jaw clenched so tightly I could see the muscle jumping there.
“Inside,” I managed, dragging him through the doorway. “Now.”
He stumbled forward, 1 hand pressed against his left shoulder where crimson bloomed like a grotesque flower. His other hand caught the exam table, his knuckles white with effort.
Up close, I could see the details my panic had missed. The shirt was not just expensive. It was custom. His pants were tailored to perfection despite being splattered with mud and blood. Even his shoes screamed money, Italian leather destroyed by whatever hell he had walked through to reach my door.
“Sit,” I ordered, already moving to the supply cabinet. “Don’t pass out yet. I need information first.”
“Bullet,” he said through gritted teeth. “Left shoulder. Through and through, I think.”
I froze with my hands on the antibiotic bottles. “You think?”
“Hard to check when you’re running.”
His eyes met mine for the first time. Ice blue, startling against his dark hair and the blood.
“You’re a doctor?”
“Veterinarian.” I set supplies on the tray with hands that had steadied the moment I shifted into professional mode. “Which means you’re technically my first human patient. So if you have a preference on anesthesia, now is the time to speak up.”
Something that might have been a laugh escaped him. “You’re joking.”
“Humor helps me not panic.”
I cut away his shirt with surgical scissors, revealing the wound beneath. Entry point in the front, exit in the back. Clean through the meat of his shoulder, appearing to miss bone and major vessels.
Lucky.
Incredibly lucky.
“This is going to hurt.”
“Everything already hurts.”
I believed him.
Up close, I could see other injuries: bruising along his ribs, scrapes on his knuckles, a cut above his eyebrow that had already stopped bleeding. This man had been through a war tonight.
“What’s your name?” I asked, irrigating the wound with saline.
He hissed but did not pull away. “Does it matter?”
“I’m about to fish around inside your shoulder with veterinary equipment. Yes, it matters.”
“Dante.” He watched my hands with an intensity that should have been unnerving. Instead, it was oddly grounding, as if he trusted me. “Just Dante.”
“Isabella,” I said. “Dr. Isabella Santos. But you can skip the title, since I’m practicing medicine without a license right now.”
I injected local anesthetic around the wound. “This will help a little. Tell me about the people looking for you.”
“The less you know, the safer you are.”
“The man bleeding all over my exam table doesn’t get to make that call.” I began suturing, each stitch precise despite my racing heart. “Someone shot you. Multiple someones, judging by how paranoid you are. They might come looking. I need to know what I’m dealing with.”
Dante was silent for a long moment.
Then he said, “Business associates. A disagreement that got violent.”
“Business associates don’t usually settle disagreements with bullets.”
“Mine do.”
The simple honesty of it sent ice down my spine. But I did not stop working. I couldn’t. Whatever Dante was, whoever had done this, he was still a patient. Still a person bleeding in front of me.
I was halfway through the 2nd suture when Thor started barking.
My German Shepherd, all 80 pounds of rescue-dog muscle and loyalty, came bounding from the back room where he had been sleeping. He skidded to a halt at the doorway, hackles raised, a low growl rumbling from his chest.
Dante’s reaction was instantaneous. His right hand moved toward his waistband even as his body twisted away from the threat. The movement tore at my sutures, and fresh blood welled up.
“Stop,” I commanded, pressing gauze against the wound. “Thor, sit.”
The dog’s growl cut off mid-sound. He sat, but his eyes never left Dante.
Dante had gone completely still. His hand had fallen away from whatever weapon he had been reaching for, but tension vibrated through every line of his body.
“Your guard dog?”
“My friend.” I kept pressure on his shoulder. “You’re going to have to breathe through this. I need to restart the suture, and it’s going to hurt worse the 2nd time.”
But Thor had already made his decision. The shepherd stood, shook himself once, and padded forward. He came right up to the exam table, pressed his nose against Dante’s knee, and then did something he had never done with a stranger before.
He lay down at the bleeding man’s feet.
“He has never…” I trailed off, watching my dog settle in as if he had found something worth protecting. “He doesn’t trust people. It took him 3 months to let me touch him after I pulled him from that fighting ring.”
Dante’s hand, the one that had been reaching for a weapon moments earlier, slowly extended toward Thor. The dog allowed it. He let the stranger scratch behind his ears with fingers that trembled slightly.
“Smart dog,” Dante murmured.
“Terrible judge of character, apparently.”
That almost-laugh came again. “Probably.”
I finished the suturing in silence. 23 stitches total. Not my finest work, but it would hold. I bandaged the wound, my fingers brushing against skin that was warmer than it should have been.
Fever, probably. Shock, definitely.
“You need antibiotics,” I said, already calculating what I had in stock. “And rest. And probably a real hospital, but I’m guessing that’s not happening.”
“Can’t.”
He tried to stand and swayed dangerously. I caught him, and for a moment we were too close. Close enough that I could smell him beneath the copper of blood. Cedar and something darker. Expensive cologne and danger, mixed into something that made my pulse jump.
“You can’t go anywhere,” I said, stepping back quickly. “It’s almost 11:00. Where exactly are you planning to go?”
Dante looked toward the front windows. Beyond them, the Oregon night was complete. No streetlights this far from town. Just darkness and the wind moving through the pines.
“Away from here before they come looking.”
“If they come looking, they’ll find an empty clinic and a lot of questions. If you stay, I can claim you’re…” I thought fast. “My cousin visiting from out of state who got injured in a hiking accident.”
“You’d lie for me?”
“I’d lie to keep armed men from shooting up my clinic.” I pointed toward the door that led to my small apartment attached to the building. “There’s a couch. Seven hours until my assistant gets here at 6:00. That gives you time to rest and disappear before anyone asks questions.”
He studied me with those unsettling pale eyes. “Why?”
“Because my dog likes you. And because whatever you are, whoever is after you, right now you’re just a patient who needs help.”
I crossed to the medicine cabinet and pulled out antibiotic tablets and pain medication. “Take these. All of them. And if you’re not gone by morning, we’re going to have a very different conversation.”
Dante took the pills and swallowed them dry. “Thank you, Dr. Santos.”
Type "3103" 💬 and hit "Like" to see the full story