?Chapter 1419:
The attending doctor nodded vigorously. “Alright, Dr. Wilson, just tell us what you need.”
This felt like their final hope!
Norah acted swiftly. She left to write the prescription, and once she handed it over, the medical team immediately got to work and prepared the medication for the Commander.
“The Commander is in aa and sometimes coughing up blood,” Norah thought to herself.
She sat before theputer, her brows tightly knit, her mind racing. At the moment, she struggled to recall where she had seen symptoms like these before.
She was sure she’d encountered a simr case during her medical practice. The Commander’s condition couldn’t wait. She needed to remember—fast.
Theputer, provided by Kason, was set up to help her ess restricted information and conduct research.
Norah logged into a hacker forum known for its wide range of topics. She beganbing through a thread discussing rare diseases, scanning post after post.
While scrolling, she identally clicked a rted link to an article about the globe’s flora and fauna.
As an image of a particr nt appeared on the screen, a memory struck her like lightning.
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She remembered.
During a mission in Norston, she had encountered a remote tribalmunity. Some members had unknowingly consumed a poisonous nt, and she had observed firsthand its devastating effects. What stood out was that the antidote grew right next to the toxic nt. The symptoms caused by the poisonous nt matched the Commander’s condition—falling into aa and coughing up blood.
Norah had been unable tomunicate with the tribe at the time, but she deduced that while the poison wasn’t immediately fatal, it would be deadly without the antidote.
The nt was known as the “Boneless Flower,” and the antidote, “ciu.”
Letting out a deep breath, Norah felt a wave of relief. At least now she had a direction instead of groping in the dark.
The nt image in the forum looked vaguely like the Boneless Flower, but neither it nor Ciu was documented in medical literature—she had named them herself back then.
If the memory hadn’t resurfaced, she would have resorted to acupuncture to slowly extract the poison while searching for a cure.
With rity returning, Norah immediately opened a new document on herputer. She began typing everything she remembered about the Boneless Flower and Ciu.
The poison afflicting the Commander was likely an extract from the Boneless Flower, designed not to kill instantly but to prolong suffering. Letting someone waste away in agony on a hospital bed wasn’t just cruel—it was deeply malicious.
Had she not traveled to Norston during that mission, she might never have learned about this rare nt, hidden in an untouched corner of the world, far from modern civilization.
After organizing her findings, Norah printed the document and went straight to the attending doctor.
“This is the solution. The priority now is to locate Ciu and extract the antidote,” she exined.
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