Point
n the cold air of the emergency ward. My legs refused to move, my heart crashing so loud
ric emergency-pat
spon
straight through
ying to rush after them,
do their j
if he-what if he doesn't-" I
dead. H
ping of machines, the sound of rubber soles screeching on polished floors, the r
on me. I sank onto the cold metal bench outside the ER, rocking b
't take him. T
the door
ed out, his fa
era Sharma?
to speak. My mo
ath, and in t
d stoppe
he'd done this a thousand times. But this wasn't j
e," he sai
sank to the floor in re
I whispered. "Thank
word hit me
p slowly.
ing a high fever for days. That, combined with the fainting and tremors..
he word alie
't under
coordination, his temperature, everything. We believe it's congenital-it
ed, but no s
Soon. The pressure building in his brain could cause l
g hand to my chest.
to happen in the next few days. We've already admitt
d dragging me deeper into
"You'll need to prepare financiall
n, lifting my h
"Close to eigh
t. L
hospital floor o
make fifteen thousand a month. I..
you the details of our medical assistance program. S
h papers and numbers th
he said, nodding respect
like it was made of fire. Eight
from the ICU. Through the glass, I saw his tiny frame lying there, t
ed up to me for everything. The reason I got out
?" I whispered.
I had almost forgotten he was still
," I whispered. "
t you always do, Me
ourage doesn't pay hospital bills. My strength does
," he said quietly. "Sometimes, they wal
hen the universe had spent years beating me down. But when I
a way," I s
or break, Even if I had to
d find
doors I had once smiled at, now only able to beg through cracked lips.
could he
surviving ou
so so
kind words didn't pay hospital bills.
v's hospital papers crumpled in my hand. My body felt like it had aged ten years
appened to him whil
dn't find the
cream. To bre
y-silently, because even
re Raghav's backpack usu
ain. Little things, n