Chapter 4 Marianne #2
Marianne stood abruptly and walked to the window.
The view showed the parking garage, grey concrete against grey sky, utterly devoid of beauty or interest. She had specifically requested an office with no distracting view.
She had wanted a space that was functional rather than pleasant, a reminder that she was here to work rather than to enjoy herself.
Now she wished for something else to look at. Something other than her own reflection in the dark glass and the thoughts that wouldn't stop circling.
She was attracted to Isla Bennett.
The admission rose from some place she had been trying not to acknowledge.
It wasn't just professional respect, though there was that too.
It wasn't just fascination with a complex case, though that was part of it.
There was something more. Something personal.
Something that made her pulse jump whenever Isla walked into a room, that made her lose focus whenever those grey eyes met hers.
It was the worst possible complication.
Marianne had not survived in this industry by allowing personal feelings to cloud her judgment. She had learned early that emotions were vulnerability, that attraction was distraction, that the only way to remain effective was to maintain absolute control over her inner life.
The last time she had let herself feel something real, she had been thirty-two and newly promoted, certain that she had figured out how to balance professional success with personal happiness.
Her name had been Sarah, and she had been a hospital administrator at the same facility where Marianne worked.
They had kept it secret for nearly a year, meeting in hotels and borrowed apartments, building a relationship that felt like it could survive anything.
When the scandal broke, when the board needed someone to blame for a systemic failure that had nothing to do with either of them, Sarah had chosen institutional survival over personal loyalty.
She had testified against Marianne. Had characterized their relationship as a conflict of interest that had impaired Marianne's judgment.
Had walked away with her career intact while Marianne was left to rebuild from the rubble.
Marianne had learned. She had built walls so high and thick that no one had gotten close enough to hurt her since. She had made herself untouchable, impenetrable, utterly professional in every aspect of her life.
And now a trauma surgeon with grey eyes and steady hands was threatening to tear all of it down.
Isla Bennett was exactly the kind of woman Marianne had learned to avoid. Passionate. Impulsive. Convinced of her own rightness. The kind of person who would tear through every boundary without even noticing the destruction she left behind.
And yet.
There had been something across the trauma bay when their eyes met. Something that had felt like recognition. Like looking into a mirror and seeing a reflection that was distorted but somehow still familiar.
Marianne shook her head and turned away from the window. This was ridiculous. She was projecting. She was exhausted. She was letting the adrenaline of the morning's chaos affect her judgment in ways she couldn't afford.
She needed to focus. She needed to remember why she was here. She needed to build her case and demonstrate her value and protect herself from the kind of disaster that came from letting her guard down.
Tomorrow she would return to the trauma bay. She would observe with clinical detachment. She would document deviations and outcomes without allowing herself to be swayed by the artistry of Isla's hands or the intensity of her gaze. She would be professional, thorough, and utterly impersonal.
She would not think about the way her heart had raced when Isla challenged her in front of the entire team.
She would not think about the grudging respect that had replaced her certainty.
She would not think about what it might be like to have that fierce focus directed at something other than surgery.
The files were waiting. The work continued. Marianne sat back down at her desk and picked up her pen, determined to restore the order that the morning had disrupted.
But her hand trembled slightly as she wrote, and the words on the page seemed suddenly inadequate to capture what she had witnessed. Isla Bennett was not a liability to be managed. She was something else entirely. Something that Marianne's neat categories and careful protocols couldn't contain.
And that terrified her more than any malpractice suit ever could.
She worked late into the evening, long past the time when the administrative wing emptied and the cleaning staff began their rounds. The files blurred together. The notes accumulated. The case against Isla grew more complicated with every page she reviewed.
Around nine o'clock, her phone buzzed with an email from Alexandra Vale.
A brief message, professionally worded, asking for an update on the audit progress.
The CEO wanted to know whether Marianne had identified any actionable concerns.
Whether the board's investment in oversight was producing the expected returns.
Marianne stared at the screen before composing a careful reply. The audit was proceeding as planned. Dr. Bennett's cases showed a consistent pattern of deviation from established protocols. The outcomes data was still being analyzed.
She didn't mention that the outcomes data was overwhelmingly positive.
Didn't mention that every deviation she had documented had resulted in a patient who was alive today instead of dead.
Didn't mention that she was beginning to question whether the board's expectations and the hospital's best interests were actually the same thing.
Those were conversations for later. Or never.
When she finally left the hospital, the parking garage was nearly empty and the night was cold.
A thin fog had rolled in from somewhere, turning the streetlights into halos and making the world feel smaller, more contained.
Marianne sat in her car before starting the engine, her hands on the steering wheel, her eyes staring at nothing.
She was in trouble. She knew it with the bone-deep certainty of someone who had been in trouble before. This job was supposed to be a fresh start, a chance to rebuild her reputation after Riverside General. It was supposed to be clean and professional and safe.
Instead, she was developing feelings for the woman she had been hired to destroy.
Marianne started the engine and pulled out of the garage. The drive home was automatic, her body navigating familiar streets while her mind churned with impossible thoughts.
She would reinforce her boundaries. She would maintain her professional distance. She would not let Isla Bennett become anything more than a case file and a challenging problem.
The car's headlights cut through the fog as she drove through the quiet streets of Los Angeles.
Past closed shops and empty sidewalks. Past buildings that held a thousand stories she would never know.
The city felt different at this hour, stripped of its daytime energy, revealing something quieter and more vulnerable underneath.
Marianne thought about the way Isla had looked in the trauma bay.
The absolute focus. The hands that never wavered.
The confidence that bordered on arrogance but somehow stopped just short, tempered by something deeper—a raw need to save every patient, as if failing wasn't just a clinical failure but a personal devastation she couldn't survive.
What would it be like to care about something that much?
Marianne had cared once. Before Sarah. Before Riverside General. Before she learned that caring was just another word for vulnerability. She had believed in things then. Had thought she could make a difference, could fix broken systems, could protect patients from institutional failures.
Now she just tried to survive. To do her job well enough to keep it. To build cases and write reports and maintain the professional detachment that kept her safe.
Isla Bennett looked at the world differently. For her, every shift was a battle, every patient a person worth fighting for. She didn't worry about institutional survival or career protection. She just saw the problem in front of her and threw everything she had at solving it.
It was reckless. It was dangerous. It was everything Marianne had spent years learning to avoid.
And God help her, it was beautiful.
She pulled into her apartment building's garage and sat in the darkness, her hands still gripping the steering wheel. The fog outside made the world feel like it was wrapped in cotton, muffled and distant and somehow unreal.
Tomorrow she would go back to Oakridge. She would observe and document and build her case. She would be the professional, thorough, impartial auditor that the board was paying her to be.
But tonight, alone in her car with the fog pressing against the windows, Marianne allowed herself one moment of honesty.
She realised she might be falling for Isla Bennett. And she had no idea how to stop.