“What have you been doing?”
The boy’s name was Eli. He was fourteen years old, thin as a shadow, with cracked lips and hands rough from sleeping on cold streets. He had not eaten since the day before. Most nights, he slept behind the hospital dumpsters because the walls blocked the wind. Sometimes nurses gave him bread. Sometimes they chased him away.
That day, the rain was heavy. Eli stood near the hospital doors, soaking wet and trembling. He was not begging. He never did. He only watched people go in and out, warm and clean, carrying things he had never owned.
Inside one bright room, doctors stood in silence.
A baby lay on a hospital bed.
Noah Hargreave, eight months old.
Tubes everywhere. Machines breathing for him. His chest barely moved.
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