The ransom demand is $3 million. For 40 million patient records, that's suspiciously cheap. Three years ago, cybersecurity specialist Sarah Chen advised a hospital not to pay a ransom. A patient died. Sarah's career didn't survive the fallout. Now Meridian Health Systems—23 hospitals, seven states, 40 million patients —is under attack. And they need Sarah back. But something is wrong. The attackers aren't acting like criminals. They're targeting specific patient files: politicians, executives, anyone with secrets worth hiding. And buried in the code is a message meant only for Sarah. Remember Eleanor Whitmore. The woman who died three years ago. The death that destroyed Sarah's career. This isn't ransomware. It's revenge. Sarah has 48 hours to stop the largest mass extortion in history—before 40 million people receive emails exposing their deepest medical secrets. HIV status. Addiction treatment. Abortions. Mental health records. Everyone has something to hide. Someone is about to make them pay for it. Your secrets are never as safe as you think.