***
The following day, I walked back into Room 304 with a chart and a calm expression. My father looked nervous the moment he saw me.
“Kel… ly…”
I checked his IV line. “How are you feeling this morning?”
He swallowed. “I’m… sorry.”
I kept my tone professional. “You need to focus on your recovery.”
His eyes searched my face. “I… kept… image…”
“I’m… sorry.”
“I know,” I said quietly.
He looked as if he wanted to say more, but the words wouldn’t come.
So I did my job. I assigned the best physical therapist in the building and ensured his medication was adjusted correctly. When his feeding schedule needed changing, I handled it personally.
My coworker Maria noticed one afternoon. “You sure are giving Room 304 a lot of attention.”
“He needs it,” I simply said.
She said nothing more.
I assigned the best physical therapist.
Recovery from a major stroke isn’t fast.
During the first month, my father couldn’t sit up without assistance, and by the second month, he learned how to grip a foam ball with his left hand. Speech therapy helped him form clearer words.
One afternoon, he looked at me and said, “You… stayed.”
I didn’t reply.
But I didn’t walk away either.
My father couldn’t sit up.
***
Three months later, the doctors discharged him. He couldn’t live alone.
Brittany had taken everything during the divorce, and his remaining assets had been sold to pay medical bills.
My father’s sister, Carol, agreed to take him in.
The discharge day felt strangely quiet. I stood at the nurses’ station finishing paperwork when the transport van arrived.
My father sat in a wheelchair near the entrance. His sister stood beside him.
Brittany had taken everything.
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