"Have the platform staff take the container straight to the train! Someone will be waiting at Lythoria Station to pick it up!" I screamed at the top of my lungs.
As long as that heart got on the train, there was still a chance.
The police officer hesitated for a split second.
And in that brief window, Edward moved. He lunged forward without warning and kicked the bottom of the cooler.
With a thud, the cooler flew out of my arms, crashing onto the marble floor.
The lid popped open, and the preservation fluid splashed everywhere.
Through the frosty white mist, the donor heart—wrapped in its sterile bag—rolled out, flipped twice across the floor, and came to a stop against the base of a trash can.
"No!" I shrieked, throwing my entire body forward.
My knees slammed into the ground. The pain made my vision go black, but I didn't care.
I scooped the heart up with both hands. Its temperature was rising rapidly.
The preservation fluid was still leaking from the torn sterile bag.
"No… it can't be exposed to the air…"
Shaking violently, I desperately shielded the heart against my chest, wrapping it in my clothes as tears spilled down my face.
Edward stood nearby, clapping his hands together and shrugging. "See that, everyone? He's guarding it with his life. You really think that's anything legal?"
The camera flashes from the surrounding crowd kept blinking.
Four armed police officers stepped up. Two pinned my shoulders down while the other two pried my hands open.
"Drop the item! Put your hands behind your head!"
"You can't take it! Please, I beg you! That's a heart! It's a human heart!"
They pried my fingers away, one by one.
The donor heart was dropped into an evidence bag and sent off to the forensics lab.
I slumped onto the freezing floor, completely drained of all my strength.
Edward walked over and looked down at me with a smirk. He turned off his live stream, leaned down, and whispered in my ear, "Conner, that's what happens when you don't listen."
In the interrogation room, handcuffed to the metal chair, I explained desperately, "Officer! There are no drugs in that cooler! It really is a heart!
"Every single minute it spends at room temperature, the success rate of the transplant drops by 10%! The recipient is a 72-year-old man suffering from total organ failure. This is his absolute last chance!"
The interrogator remained expressionless. "Until the lab results are back, the evidence cannot be released."
"It's not drugs! It really isn't!"
I broke down, tears streaming uncontrollably down my face.
"Call our hospital! Call the hospital director, Ms. Carter! She can prove it! A whole surgical team of 17 people worked from 3:00 am until 8:00 am to harvest that heart!"
The interrogator looked at his colleague beside him and hesitated for a moment. "We can contact your hospital to verify, but until the results come back, you're staying right here."
I nodded frantically. "Fine! I won't leave! Just make the call right now!"
The interrogator pulled out his phone and handed it to me. "Dial it yourself. Put it on speaker."
With trembling hands, I dialed Carissa's number.
It rang twice before she picked up. Her voice was frantic on the other end. "Conner! Where the hell are you? Lythoria has called eight times! The recipient's blood pressure has dropped to 60!"
"Ms. Carter!" I sobbed into the phone. "I'm locked in an interrogation room at the train station! Edward reported me for drug smuggling! They knocked the heart out! They're testing it right now! You need to tell the police right now that it's a donor heart, not drugs!"
Carissa lost her temper, swearing loudly. "That bastard! Which room are you in? I'm starting a video call right now!"
The interrogator gave a brief nod, and I quickly switched it to a video call.
Carissa's face appeared on the screen. Behind her was the hospital director's office, with medical licenses and various awards hanging on the wall.
"Officer, I am Carissa Carter, director of Galdoria Hospital. Conner is the chief of our organ transplant department. We did perform a donor heart procurement surgery early this morning. I can provide all the surgical logs and the matching system ID numbers.
"That heart is completely legal! It was allocated through the Red Cross organ donation system, and it has a full set of ethical approvals."
The interrogator's expression softened a fraction.
He was just about to say something when the click-clack of leather shoes echoed from outside the door.
Edward pushed his way into the room, taking a sip from a cup of coffee he'd bought from a vending machine.
"Oh, look at that. Calling in help already?"
He strolled over to my side. As he leaned down and glanced at the phone screen, he scoffed. "Officers, don't let them fool you. This Carissa woman is his secret lover. They've been in this organ-trafficking ring together for years.
"My sister already gathered all the evidence on this. She was planning to report it to the disciplinary committee tomorrow. The only reason he was in such a rush to run today was to get this shipment out before everything hit the fan."
On the screen, Carissa's face turned red with fury. "That is an absolute lie! What the hell is going on over there? Who is this guy?"
Edward tilted his head toward the camera. "I'm his brother-in-law, and I represent the victims here. Nice acting, Ms. Carter. Great choice of background, too.
"But let me tell you something. With how advanced AI is these days, who knows if you're even a real person? For all we know, you're sitting in some rented apartment acting in front of a green screen."
Stirred up by Edward's claims, the interrogator's face tensed up again. "A video call cannot be accepted as direct evidence."
"What are you guys waiting for anyway?" Edward pressed.
"Tear that stupid cooler apart and test it already! I'm telling you, there's definitely a hidden compartment in there. That's where the drugs are!"
The interrogator weighed the options for a moment, then picked up his radio. "Lab, dismantle the cooler and check for any hidden compartments."
"No!" I struggled, lunging toward the door.
"You can't take it apart! The cooler is already cracked from the fall. If you dismantle it, the heart is finished!"
Two officers pinned me down as I thrashed desperately.
15 minutes later, a lab technician walked in, carrying a metal tray. On that tray lay the heart, stripped from its sterile bag.
It had been exposed to room temperature for nearly 30 minutes. Its surface had turned from a vibrant crimson to a dull, dark purple.
The tech handed over a report. "No illegal substances detected. The liquid in the sterile bag is standard organ preservation fluid, and there are no hidden compartments in the cooler. This is a human heart."
Silence fell over the interrogation room.
Edward froze mid-sip before trying to force a look of confidence. "Well, that still doesn't prove he isn't smuggling organs. Who handles a legal organ so suspiciously?"
Nobody answered him.
The interrogator's expression had turned incredibly grim.
He looked at the discolored heart, then back at the lab report. Sweat started breaking out on his forehead.
Meanwhile, I collapsed back into the chair, completely hollowed out.
I stared at the heart on the tray.
30 minutes at room temperature. The preservation fluid was gone. The sterile environment was entirely compromised.
It was over. The heart was completely ruined.
My mouth hung open, but not a single sound came out. Tears just poured down my face.
400 miles away, a 72-year-old man was lying on an operating table with his chest wide open, waiting for this heart to save his life.
Now, he would never get it.
…
The digital clock on the wall read 11:47 am.
The train had left 40 minutes ago. Even if the heart hadn't been ruined, it was too late.
I leaned against the wall of the interrogation room, my body shaking uncontrollably.
The phone in my pocket vibrated nonstop.
The interrogator glanced at me but didn't stop me.
I pulled it out and saw that the screen was flooded with missed calls. 23 from Lythoria Hospital, 11 from Carissa, and six from the head nurse from my department.
There was also a never-ending string of WhatsApp notifications.
Before I could even look at them, another call flashed on the screen. The caller ID read, "Lythoria Hospital ICU, Dr. Oscar Hooper."
With trembling hands, I answered it and hit speakerphone. "Dr. Randall! Where is the heart? Where the hell is it?"
Oscar's voice was completely shot. "The recipient is already on ECMO! But he can't hold out much longer! His liver and kidneys are starting to fail!
"A surgical team of 30 people has been waiting here for four hours! Just tell me exactly when the heart is going to get here!"
I opened my mouth, but not a single syllable came out.
What was I supposed to say?
Was I supposed to tell him that the heart was sitting on a tray in an interrogation room, already reduced to a discolored piece of dead tissue?
"Dr. Hooper…" My voice trembled. "The heart… It's already…"
I couldn't finish. I covered my face and broke down sobbing.
The other end of the line went dead silent for a long time. So long that I thought the call had dropped.
Then, Oscar spoke, his voice tightly strained. "Conner, do you have any idea who this recipient is? Do you know how long the entire hospital has been preparing for this surgery? Do you know—"
Before he could finish, the rapid beeping of equipment alarms blared in the background.
Then came a nurse's panicked shout, "Blood pressure is unmeasurable! Heart rate is zero! Dr. Hooper! The ECMO can't hold him anymore!"
Oscar didn't say another word to me.
The phone was filled only with a chaotic mess of footsteps, machine alarms, and shouting.
After about two minutes, Oscar picked the phone back up. His voice had gone flat, completely devoid of any emotion. "Conner, the recipient suffered heart failure at 11:51 am. He has been pronounced dead. You're on your own now."
The line went dead.
I slumped against the wall, sliding down to the floor.
My tears had run dry, leaving my eyes burning and raw. Every single joint in my body ached.
That was a human life.
A 72-year-old man who had waited eight months to find a matching heart was gone just like that.
The interrogator kept his head down, not daring to look at me.
Right then, a cold sneer came from the side. Edward set down his cup of coffee and clapped his hands. "Done with the show?"
He stood up from his chair and stretched. "Conner, your acting skills are honestly wasted at the operating table. Dead recipient? Heart failure? I bet every single one of those people is an actor you paid. Even the voiceovers at a funeral home aren't this professional."
He walked over to me, crouched down, and tapped my forehead with his finger. "Stop playing the victim, Conner. You think crying a little is going to fix this?
"Let me tell you, half a million people watched the live stream today. The hashtag 'DrugSmugglingDoctor' is already trending on social media. Your career is officially over."
I finally snapped back to reality.
I looked up and stared him straight in the eye. "Edward, that was a life. A living, breathing human life is gone because of your single kick. How does your conscience handle that?"
Edward blinked, then burst out laughing. He laughed so hard that he bent double. "Conscience? How much is a conscience even worth? Don't try to scare me with dead people, Conner.
"People die in hospitals every single day. What difference does one more or less make? Besides, who knows if that old guy is actually dead? For all I know, he's perfectly fine, and you're just trying to guilt-trip me."
He straightened up, pulled out his phone to check something, and clicked his tongue. "But look, Conner, let's not make things uglier than they need to be. After all, Sara is still waiting at home for news."
He stepped closer and lowered his voice. "You know very well that in the three years you've been married to Sara, that resettlement property has always been under your name.
"The 300 thousand dollars my dad's treatment cost came out of that property, too. Now that he's gone, shouldn't that apartment be handed back to our family?"
My eyes widened as I stared at him. "Y-you pulled this whole stunt at the train station today just for that apartment?"
Edward nodded. "Why else? You think I have nothing better to do than follow you all the way out here?"