Chapter 770
The live stream chat exploded instantly.
"Is this Zoe's doing?" A comment flashed across the screen.
"What do you mean?"
"She's afraid Vivian will expose her, so she staged the accident!"
"Are you insane? You can't control a car crash!"
"Stop defending Vivian, you stans!"
The comments section erupted into chaos.
Vivian Laurent and Ethan Roscente finished their noodles quickly and rushed back to the hospital.
When she announced she would proceed with the simulated surgery, the doctors were stunned.
"Dr. Laurent, your performance in the last surgery already proved your skills."
Vivian shook her head. "The equipment is ready. Let's begin."
"Don't you need to rest?"
"There's no time."
Ethan took on the role of assistant again, holding up his phone to continue the live stream.
For the first time, the operating room was fully visible to the audience.
A medical dummy lay on the table, monitors displaying simulated vital signs.
Rows of gleaming surgical instruments were neatly arranged.
Vivian swiftly completed sterilization.
"Fractured ribs with a foreign object penetrating the heart." She pointed to the dummy's chest. "The incision must be precise down to the millimeter."
She performed the procedure while explaining emergency medical knowledge.
The live stream audience had an epiphany.
Medical knowledge could be this accessible.
The scalpel glided through the dummy's chest cavity.
"This heart is severely damaged. A transplant is necessary."
The camera zoomed in.
Viewers held their breath.
A heart transplant required a bypass machine to sustain life.
Vivian's movements flowed like water.
Laymen watched for spectacle; professionals watched for technique.
The medical students were awestruck.
Every motion was executed with terrifying precision.
The angle, pressure, and depth of each incision were flawless.
She avoided every potential bleeding point.
Even as a simulation, it made pulses race.
No one realized a human chest could expand so wide.
No one had seen a heart beating outside the body.
No one had grasped how fragile—and tenacious—life could be.