The sound was impossible, a hallucination born of a freezing, oxygen-starved brain. Helicopters didn't fly in conditions like this. It was suicide.
But the sound grew louder, a percussive beat against the storm's fury. A powerful searchlight cut through the swirling snow, sweeping across the desolate landscape before locking onto our position.
Bryan and the others froze, their faces a mixture of confusion and alarm. Kelsi's crocodile tears dried up instantly.
The helicopter, a big, powerful-looking bird painted with SAR-Search and Rescue-markings, hovered expertly above us, its rotors whipping the snow into a blinding frenzy. A door slid open, and two figures began to rappel down with breathtaking speed and efficiency.
They hit the ground running. The lead figure, broad-shouldered and moving with an unnerving calm, strode directly toward our group. He ignored everyone else and headed straight for my snow pit.
"Sir, this is a restricted research site," Bryan began, stepping forward to intercept him. "You can't just-"
The rescuer didn't even break stride. He placed a firm hand on Bryan's chest and shoved him aside with an ease that was almost contemptuous.
He knelt beside me, his face a mask of focused intensity. He wore no helmet, just a thermal beanie, and his eyes, a startlingly clear gray, took in my condition in a single, sweeping glance. He saw the gash in my suit, the blue tinge of my lips, the terrifying stillness of my chest.
"Severe hypothermia, core temp critical," he barked to his partner, his voice a low, commanding rumble that cut through the wind. "Pupils are sluggish. We're losing her. Get the thermal capsule and the IV, now!"
His partner was already moving, working with a silent, practiced urgency.
"What's going on?" Bryan stammered, bewildered. "She's fine, she's just being difficult."
The rescuer's head snapped up, and he fixed Bryan with a look so cold it could have frozen hell over. "Your teammate activated an emergency beacon fifteen minutes ago. Her biometric signature is flatlining. You have thirty seconds to explain to me why she's lying in a hole in the ice with a compromised suit while you're standing here fully functional."
His name tag read HOLT LEVY, SAR-LEAD.
Bryan's face went pale. "Beacon? That's impossible, I have her sat phone."
Holt ignored him. His gloved hands were surprisingly gentle as he checked my pulse, his touch a spark of warmth against my frozen skin. "Hang on, Alex," he murmured, his voice close to my ear. "We've got you."
He knew my name. Of course, he did. The beacon was registered to me.
He and his partner worked with a fluid, terrifying efficiency. They sliced open my ruined sleeve to insert an IV, flooding my system with a warm saline solution. A searing, painful warmth began to spread through my veins. They wrapped me in a silver, crinkling hypothermia blanket, then carefully placed me into an insulated transport capsule.
As they prepared to hoist me up to the helicopter, Holt stood and faced Bryan. His calm demeanor had vanished, replaced by a tightly controlled fury.
"Who the hell are you?" Bryan demanded, trying to reclaim some shred of authority.
"I'm Holt Levy. My team is contracted by OmniClimb for high-risk field test emergencies," Holt said, his voice dangerously low. "Which means right now, on this mountain, I am God. And you just left one of my charges to die."
He held up a small satellite phone. "As per our contract, I've already patched in your CEO."
A familiar voice, crackling with static but clear as a bell, erupted from the phone's speaker. It was Edward Bullock, the founder and CEO of OmniClimb, a former mountaineer himself with a zero-tolerance policy for incompetence.
"Acosta!" Bullock's voice was a roar of pure fury. "Levy's team just sent me Alex's vitals and a photo of her suit. Explain yourself. Now."
"Sir, it's a misunderstanding," Bryan stammered, his face ashen. "She was acting irrationally, she was a danger to the team…"
"She's the most competent engineer I have!" Bullock bellowed. "And you left her to die in a blizzard over what? An intern got chilly? You're fired, Acosta. You and the intern. Your credentials are revoked. Your careers are over. You will be billed for the full cost of this rescue and every piece of damaged equipment. If Alex doesn't make it, I will personally see to it that you are charged with negligent homicide."
Kelsi let out a horrified squeak.
The line went dead.
Holt pocketed the phone, his gray eyes boring into Bryan. "You'll be hearing from my legal team as well."
He turned away without another word, clipping himself onto the hoist line next to my capsule. As we were lifted into the churning, snow-filled sky, the last thing I saw was Bryan Acosta standing alone on the mountain, his face a mask of disbelief and utter ruin.
---
The roar of the helicopter blades was a lullaby, a promise of life. I drifted in and out of consciousness inside the medical pod, a warm, safe cocoon. The searing pain of thawing had subsided into a dull, throbbing ache. Every twitch of a muscle was a reminder of how close I had come.
"Welcome back."
I blinked my eyes open. Holt Levy was sitting on a bench across from me, monitoring the readouts from the various machines I was hooked up to. He had a thermos in his hand, and the smell of hot tea filled the small cabin.
"You gave us a run for our money," he said, his voice softer now, the hard edge of command gone. "Another ten minutes and… well. Let's not go there. Your core temperature is coming up steadily."
I tried to thank him, but my throat was raw, and only a dry rasp came out.
He seemed to understand. He unscrewed the cap of the thermos, poured a small amount of steaming liquid into it, and held it to my lips. "Just a sip. It's warm. It'll help."
The tea was sweet and hot, a shock of life against my frozen insides. It slid down my throat, easing the raw, burning sensation.
"Thank you," I managed to whisper, my voice hoarse.
"All in a day's work," he said with a small, tired smile. "I have a lot of respect for people who push the limits. I have none for people who leave their partners behind. What he did…" He shook his head, his jaw tight. "It was unforgivable."
The helicopter landed with a gentle bump. The main door slid open, and a blast of cold, clean air filled the cabin. Standing on the tarmac, his face etched with worry, was Edward Bullock.
He climbed inside, his eyes immediately finding me. The stern, no-nonsense CEO I knew was gone, replaced by the concerned mentor who had first seen my potential.
"Alex," he said, his voice thick with emotion. He reached out and gently squeezed my arm over the thermal blanket. "I am so, so sorry. This never should have happened. The breakdown in protocol… in basic human decency… it's on me. I put him in charge."
A lump formed in my throat. The professional mask I had worn for years began to crack. "It's not your fault, Edward," I whispered, a tear escaping and tracing a hot path down my cold cheek. "It's mine. I loved the wrong person."
Bullock's expression hardened, his eyes flashing with a familiar, steely glint. "They will pay for this, Alex. I promise you that."
Just as he spoke, the door to the medical bay in the small mountain clinic was thrown open with such force that it slammed against the wall.
Bryan stood there, his hair wild, his face red and blotchy from crying. He looked completely unraveled.
"Alex!" he cried, rushing toward my bed. "Thank God you're okay!"
He reached for my hand, but I flinched away, recoiling as if from a hot flame.
"I was so worried," he babbled, his words tumbling over each other. "I didn't know… I swear, I didn't realize how bad it was. I thought you were just… upset."
"Upset?" I found my voice, and it was filled with a cold rage that surprised me. "You thought I was upset? Bryan, do you have any idea what severe hypothermia does to a person? Do you know what it feels like to have your own blood crystallize in your veins?"
His face went chalk white. "I… I thought you were just cold. Uncomfortable."
I let out a laugh, a harsh, broken sound that turned into a wracking cough. Holt was at my side in an instant, helping me sit up, his presence a solid, reassuring weight.
"Get out," Holt said, his voice dangerously quiet as he fixed Bryan with a stare.
"You can't tell me what to do!" Bryan shrieked, his composure shattering completely. "I'm her fiancé! We're getting married!"
"No," I said, the word a shard of ice. "We're not."
I looked him dead in the eye, letting him see the full extent of my revulsion. "The wedding is off, Bryan. We are over."
He stared at me, his mouth agape, his eyes wide with disbelief. "What? No. Alex, we can't… I've already put down the deposit on the venue. My sister is handling the logistics…"
"Of course she is," I said with a bitter laugh. "Did she also advise you to leave me for dead so you could comfort the weeping intern? Was that part of the wedding plan?"
"It wasn't like that!" he protested, taking a step closer. "Kelsi was scared! You're the professional, the expert! I thought you could handle it! I didn't believe you were in real danger!"
"And why not?" I shot back, my voice rising. "Why, after all these years, after all the projects we've worked on, did you not believe me when I told you I was dying?"
He opened his mouth, then closed it again. He had no answer. Because the truth was, he didn't see me as a partner. He saw me as a tool, a resource. And when a prettier, more flattering option came along, he had discarded me without a second thought.
Bullock had seen enough. He moved with the surprising speed of a former athlete, grabbing Bryan by the collar of his expensive jacket.
"I believe the man told you to get out," Bullock growled, his voice a low threat. He shoved Bryan toward the door. "And if I ever see your face near my company or my lead engineer again, I will personally throw you off a mountain myself."
Bryan stumbled back, his eyes wild with desperation. "Alex, please," he begged, his voice cracking. "Give me another chance. I'll make it up to you, I swear."
I just closed my eyes. "There's nothing to make up. There's just… nothing."
Holt made a quiet call, and two local police officers appeared at the door. Bryan's desperate pleas turned to panicked sobs as they escorted him away, leaving a blessed, ringing silence in his wake.
---