She walks away, leaving Hoon on his knees in the rain. He screams her name— "JAE-HEE!" —but the hospital lights flicker, and she vanishes into the corridor.
She turns away. "I am Dr. Han Seung-hee. You must forget the past. Lives depend on you now."
But Soo-hyun’s heart is conflicted. She sees raw genius in Park Hoon—something Jae-joon lacks. Jae-joon, feeling threatened, decides to destroy Hoon before he even starts.
Years later…
That night, a man is rushed into the ER. He’s a North Korean defector who worked as a spy. He has a rare bullet lodged near his heart. The bullet is coated with a slow-acting poison. If not removed within 12 hours, he will die.
Seung-hee replies: "Not yet. But he’s close. I’ll push him."
To be continued… This Hindi-dubbed episode is filled with intense dialogues, emotional confrontations, and the signature Doctor Stranger twist of love tangled with espionage and medical genius. Doctor Stranger Episode 4 Hindi Dubbed
He grabs her wrist. "Look at me. You flinch the same way. You bite your lip when you lie. You are Song Jae-hee. Why are you doing this?"
Tears mix with rain on her face. She pulls away and says: "The girl you loved died in Budapest. I am a ghost sent to guide you. If you want to live, operate on the Prime Minister tomorrow. If you want to die, keep chasing a dead woman."
She walks to the operating theater just as Hoon is being handcuffed. She looks into his eyes—the same eyes that once held her in Budapest. But she says nothing. Instead, she hands a file to the hospital director. She walks away, leaving Hoon on his knees in the rain
The atmosphere is tense. Dr. Park Hoon (played by Lee Jong-suk), the genius surgeon from North Korea, has just arrived at the prestigious hospital. But he is not here for fame. He is searching for Song Jae-hee, the love of his life who he believed died in Budapest. But a mysterious woman, identical to Jae-hee, has appeared as Dr. Han Seung-hee (Jin Se-yeon).
Everyone is stunned. The room falls silent.
The operation is brutal. The bullet is millimeters from the aorta. Hoon uses a technique no South Korean doctor has seen— "Invisible Sutures" —taught to him by his father in a North Korean prison camp. He doesn’t use a heart-lung machine. He stops the heart manually for 4 minutes, removes the bullet, and restarts the heart with a single electric shock from a modified defibrillator. "I am Dr
But Hoon just smiles. "Doesn’t matter where I cut," he says. "A knife works the same in a gutter or an opera house."