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Cassie
The break room smells like burnt coffee and something else I can’t quite place. Maybe it’s the trash nobody’s taken out in three days, or maybe it’s just the weight of too many double shifts soaking into the walls. I don’t know anymore. It’s three in the morning. The fluorescent lights overhead are buzzing, that constant hum that gets under your skin after the first hour and doesn’t leave. I’ve been staring at my phone for the last ten minutes, watching the screen light up and go dark, light up and go dark. Seven missed calls and angry texts. All from Mara. I know what they say without even opening them. ‘Where the hell are you?’ ‘Jonah had another nightmare.’ ‘You promised you’d be home by midnight.’ ‘I can’t keep doing this alone.’ My thumb hovers over the notifications, but I can’t make myself tap them. Not yet. Not when I already know I’ve failed her again. The coffee in front of me has gone cold. There’s a brown ring around the rim where I took one sip an hour ago and gave up. My scrubs are stiff with old coffee stains—some patient’s daughter bumped into me earlier in the hallway, spilled her entire cup down my side, didn’t even turn around to apologize. I should go home. I should leave. But I’m too tired to get up. The door swings open and I don’t even look up. Just another nurse coming in for their break, probably. Someone else as tired as I am, running on fumes and spite. “Cassie.” That voice makes me look up. Dr. Patel’s standing in the doorway. He’s holding a Manila folder. The kind that doesn’t weigh much but somehow looks heavy in his hands. Something cold slides down my spine. “Don’t.” The word comes out before I can stop it. He moves into the room, slow, like he’s got all the time in the world even though we both know he doesn’t. “I need you to come to my office.” His voice is too gentle. The kind of gentle people use when they’re about to wreck you. I shake my head. “Just tell me here.” “Cassie—” “Whatever it is, just say it.” He glances at the door, then back at me. His jaw works like he’s chewing on words he doesn’t want to swallow. “Not here. Come on.” He doesn’t wait for me to answer. Just turns and walks out, still holding that folder like it’s something fragile. *** His office is at the end of the hall. Small and cramped. There’s a desk buried under files and patient charts, a dying plant on the windowsill that nobody’s watered in weeks, a picture of his grandkids that I haven’t seen in a while on his desk and a clock on the wall that ticks too loud. He closes the door behind me and that sound—god, that sound makes my chest tighten. “Sit down,” he says. “I’m fine standing.” “Cassie, please.” But I can’t. If I sit down, if I let my body relax even a little bit, I’ll break. So I stay on my feet, cross my arms over my chest, and I wait. Dr. Patel exhales through his nose and opens the folder. His hands are shaking just a little and that’s when I know. I know before he even opens his mouth. “Your mother’s test results came back this early morning.” The floor shifts under me. I reach out, grab the edge of his desk. My fingers dig into the wood and I focus on that—on the solid, real feeling of it—because if I don’t, I’m going to fall. “It’s not good.” He’s looking at the papers now, not at me. “The tumor’s larger than we initially thought. Advanced stage. Aggressive. She’s going to need surgery, and we need to schedule it soon.” The walls are too close. I can hear my pulse in my ears, loud and fast, drowning out the sound of that damn clock ticking. “How soon?” He closes the folder. Sets it on the desk between us like he can’t hold it anymore. “Ideally? Within the next three months. Sooner if we can get her on the schedule. The longer we wait—” “What happens if we wait?” My voice doesn’t sound like mine. He really looks at me then and I see it in his eyes before he says it. “Six months,” he says quietly. “Maybe less.” A laugh bubbles up in my throat. I don’t know where it comes from but it’s there, sharp and wrong, and I have to press my hand over my mouth to stop it. Six months. Maybe less. I think I’m still breathing. I think my heart’s still beating. But everything feels far away, like I’m watching this happen to someone else. “The surgery.” I force the words out even though my throat feels like it’s closing. “How much does it cost?” Dr. Patel hesitates. That hesitation tells me everything I need to know. “With your mother’s insurance, you’re looking at $75,000 to $80,000 out of pocket.” He rubs his hand over his face, and he looks older than he did five minutes ago. “The hospital has payment plans. Financial assistance programs. I can help you apply for charity care—” “I don’t have eighty thousand dollars.” I cut in, sharp. He flinches. “I don’t even have eight thousand.” My voice is rising now and I can’t stop it. “I barely have eight hundred in my account right now. So unless you’ve got a miracle hiding in one of those filing cabinets, I don’t know what you want me to do.” “We’ll figure something out, Cassie.” “How?” The word comes out sharp. “How are we going to figure it out? She doesn’t have time for fundraisers or charity applications or whatever else you’re about to suggest. You just said she has six months if we don’t operate. So tell me, Dr. Patel. What am I supposed to do?” He doesn’t answer. Because there isn’t an answer. “I’ll leave the paperwork at the nurses’ station,” he says finally. “Take your time looking it over. And Cassie—I’m sorry. I really am.” I don’t say anything. I just turn around and leave. *** The hallway outside his office is empty. Everyone’s either in with patients or grabbing whatever sleep they can in the on-call rooms. I slide down the wall until I’m sitting on the floor, knees pulled up to my chest, head in my hands. Eighty thousand dollars. Three months. I run the numbers in my head because that’s all I know how to do anymore. It’s the only thing that makes sense when nothing else does. I make eighteen dollars an hour. Forty hours a week when I’m lucky. Sometimes less when they cut shifts. After rent—twelve hundred for a two-bedroom walk-up in the Bronx that has hot water maybe three days a week—after groceries, after keeping the lights on and the internet connected so Jonah can do his homework, after Mara’s school supplies and bus passes and Jonah’s inhaler refills, insurance only covers half— My phone buzzes in my pocket. I pull it out. A text from Miles. ‘Hey kiddo. Can you spot me? Just til Friday. I promise.’ He won’t. He never does. But he’s on parole and if I don’t send it, if I let him spiral, he’ll end up back inside. And I can’t— I can’t. Mom’s face flashes in my mind and I have to close my eyes against it. The way she looked last week when I brought her soup after my shift. So pale. So thin. But she smiled at me anyway, like she wasn’t in pain, like she wasn’t dying. “I’m fine, baby,” she’d said. “Don’t worry about me.” Like I could do anything else. I ignore Miles for now and look at Mara’s texts again. I should call her. I should tell her I’m sorry. That I’ll be home soon. That I’ll figure this out. But I don’t know how to lie to her right now. So I sit there on the floor in an empty hallway at four in the morning, trying to figure out how to save my mother’s life with money I don’t have.CassieMy mom’s hand feels like it weighs nothing. That’s what I keep thinking as I sit here holding it, her fingers resting loose in mine like they might slip away if I don’t pay attention. The IV line taped to the back of her hand pulls slightly when she shifts, and I adjust my grip to give her more room.She’s awake but her eyes are doing that thing where they’re open but not really seeing anything, just staring at the ceiling tiles like maybe if she looks long enough they’ll tell her something she needs to know.Dr. Patel left a few minutes ago after saying what we both already knew. The surgery needs to happen soon. As soon as we can schedule it. Every day we wait makes the odds worse.“Mom.” I keep my voice low so I don’t startle her. “Did you hear what he said?”Her eyes move toward me, slow and unfocused, and she nods just barely.“We’re going to get it scheduled,” I tell her, squeezing her hand gently. “Everything’s going to be fine. I’ve got the money now. We can do this.”
CassieThe next morning, I bring his breakfast, open his curtains and set the tray down on the table like always.But this time I don’t leave right away. “We’re doing physical therapy today,” I say to his back where he’s still lying in bed facing the wall. “I’ll be back at ten. Please be ready.”“No.”“Ten o’clock, Mr Petrova.”I walk out before he can argue.At ten, I’m standing outside his door again, folder in hand, trying to steady my breathing. I knock once, then open it without waiting.He’s in his wheelchair by the window, dressed in sweatpants and a t-shirt instead of staying in bed all day. He’s not looking at me, just staring out at the grounds like they’re more interesting than anything I could possibly say.“I’m not doing this,” he says.“Yes, you are.”“You can’t make me.”“No, I can’t.” I walk over and set the folder down on his desk.“But I’m going to be here every day at ten until you do. So you can either get it over with now, or you can listen to me knock on your doo
CassieThat afternoon, I’m standing outside his studio door with the folder Mrs Rosalind gave me yesterday. Physical therapy exercises. Stretches and movements he’s supposed to be doing three times a week to maintain muscle function and prevent further deterioration.I’ve been staring at this folder all morning, knowing I need to bring it up, knowing it’s going to be a fight.I knock once.“What?” His voice comes through sharp and irritated.“I need to talk to you about something.”“No.”“It’s important.”“I don’t care.”I take a breath, count to three in my head, then open the door anyway.The studio is dim.That’s the first thing that hits me. There are windows along the far wall but the light coming through is muted and gray, not enough to really brighten the space. The kind of light that makes everything look washed out and tired.There are lamps scattered around the room, the kind artists use when they’re working, but none of them are turned on. Just sitting there dark and unuse
CassieI wake up before sunrise, get dressed in the dark, and make my way downstairs to the kitchen where Mrs Rosalind has already left ingredients prepped for his breakfast. Eggs, toast, coffee. His morning medications lined up in the small organizer she showed me how to use.By seven, I’m standing outside his door with the tray balanced carefully in both hands.I knock twice, wait five seconds, then open the door without waiting for an answer.The room is dark, curtains pulled tight like he’s trying to keep the entire world out. I can barely make out his shape in the bed, just the outline of him under the covers, completely still.I set the tray down on the table by the window as quietly as I can, then walk over to the control panel on the wall and press the button.The curtains slide open with that smooth automated hum, letting pale gray morning light spill into the room.“Good morning, Mr Petrova,” I say without looking at him. “Breakfast is on the table. Your medications are next
KaiI’m sitting by the window in my studio, staring out at nothing in particular, when I see her.She’s standing on the lawn near the driveway with her phone pressed to her ear, pacing back and forth in these small tight circles like she can’t stand still.I can’t hear what she’s saying from up here, can’t make out the words, but I can see her body language well enough to know it’s not a good conversation.She stops pacing and brings her free hand up to her face, wiping at her eyes with the heel of her palm.She’s crying.Or trying not to.Her shoulders curve inward and she turns away from the house like she doesn’t want anyone to see, like she’s trying to hold herself together and barely managing it.I watch for another few seconds, watch the way she keeps wiping at her face even though it’s clearly not helping.Then I turn away from the window.I don’t want to see this.Don’t want to know why she’s upset or who’s on the other end of that phone making her fall apart in the middle of
KaiThe light wakes me up.That’s the first thing I register, before I’m even fully conscious, before I remember where I am or what day it is. Just light, bright and sharp, cutting through my eyelids and dragging me out of whatever half-sleep I managed to fall into sometime around four in the morning.I open my eyes and immediately want to close them again.The curtains are open.All of them.Sunlight is pouring into the room, hitting every surface, making everything too bright and too clear and too much.I reach for the remote on my nightstand, the one that controls the automatic curtains, and press the button harder than I need to. The curtains start to close, smooth and silent, blocking out the light inch by inch until the room is dim again.Better.I drop the remote back on the table and stare at the ceiling, trying to remember if I opened those curtains last night.I didn’t.I never do.Which means someone else did.Someone came into my room while I was sleeping and opened the c
Cassie The first thing I think when Mrs Rosalind opens the door and steps aside to let me in, is the room is beautiful.It’s bigger than the living room in my apartment. There’s a queen-sized bed with a thick comforter that looks like it’s never been slept in, a dresser, a desk and chair by the w
CassieThe car is black and spotless, the kind where you’re afraid to breathe too hard in case you mess something up.I’m sitting in the back seat, watching the city fall away through the window. We’ve been driving for thirty minutes now, moving further and further from everything familiar until w
KaiI’m sitting in my studio with a blank canvas in front of me, the kind I used to fill without even thinking. Back when my hands knew what to do before my brain caught up, back when drawing was as natural as breathing.Now it’s sitting here, white and empty, like it’s mocking me for even trying.
CassieKatrina goes still. Like she wasn’t expecting me to say yes so fast.Then she reaches into her bag. Pulls out a pen and slides it across the table.It’s heavy when I pick it up. The kind of pen that feels important just holding it.I flip to the last page.There’s a line at the bottom with t







