“I didn’t want you to see me like this.”
That was what she said first, and somehow it hurt worse than any accusation would have. Her eyes stayed on our hands, not my face, as if looking at me directly would make the words too real.
“Emily,” I said, “how long have you been here?”
She tried to pull her hand back, but she barely had the strength. The IV tubing shifted against her wrist. The hospital bracelet scratched softly against my thumb. “Since morning,” she whispered.
“What morning?”
She did not answer.
That was when I noticed the clipboard under the blanket had slipped farther out. The top page was a hospital intake form. Her name was there. The date was there. So was the time: 6:18 AM. Under emergency contact, the line had not been left blank.
It still had my name.
Michael Harris.
My phone number.
My old apartment address crossed out in blue ink.
Before I could say anything, a woman in navy scrubs stepped out from the nurses’ station holding a sealed envelope and a small plastic bag with Emily’s personal items inside. “Emily?” she called gently. “The doctor wants to go over the next steps, but we need someone with you for the discharge conversation.”
Emily’s face collapsed.
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