PTE
's
eing in a coma, Miss Ivy," the doctor
not wanting to hear whatever he had
complications. Additionally, the cost of his ongoing care significantly exceeds
to pay more?" I asked, feeling my br
ort and let him pass on in peace, Miss Ivy,"
something you can do to save him," I begged,
st to save him, Miss Iv
ble to save my dad! I've paid every hospital bill, everything, and-and it just cannot happe
possible to save him. You cannot let him
fessional distance in his eyes. He took a step closer, lowerin
e is from a decade ago, and the drugs he's on... they're not strong enough anymore. He needs an upgrade in treatment, a complete change in h
rembling. "Then why are you
nsive. More than ten times what you're paying now. And without an immediate transfer, he does
hat I was paying now. My savings were already ashes. "So.
. His silence was all th
o him, even though I had no idea how. "I don't care if I
beep-beep-beep-beep of the heart monitor
asn't just beeping-it was screaming. Nurses were al
ast-pressure's droppin
nto the room. My father's face was pale,
rking orders. "Get him preppe
med around the bed. My hands shook so h
ked under the wires. T
undered over the chao
single, fraying thread. This time, I didn't wipe the tears rolling down
to my eyes as I dragged myself in behind them. Someone tri
but I barely heard her over the shrill c
rail, motionless body on the table made my knees buckle. Tubes
o get the infection under control before it hits
nurse called out, her ey
listening. They were all locked in a desperate rhythm-passing instruments, injecting dr
rt monitor flatlined for a fraction of a second
e! Doctor, he's n
at dripping down his temple. "If this sprea
sting and the coppery smell of blood. Ever
ogged. The machine let out
ruction!" a
ad snapped up.
I stumbled forward, my voice
t looking at me. "If we don't open his airway n
the smell of antiseptic sharp in the air
the doctor's scalp
monitor