“Ms. Davis,” she began softly. “There’s a slight complication. We don’t have a private room available this morning. You’ll be in a double room. There’s already a patient there, a man, but he’s… very quiet. He promised to be no trouble.”
I looked at the hospital gown in my hands. “It’s fine,” I said. What else was there to say?
Cliffhanger: Brenda led me to Room 212 at the end of a long, shadowed hall. I pushed the door open to find a man reading a leather-bound book by the window—a man who looked at me not with the distracted gaze of a stranger, but with a presence that felt like a physical weight in the room.
Chapter 3: The Geometry of Silence
The room was a study in clinical precision. Two beds, two nightstands, and a single window overlooking a courtyard where a wild rose bush clung to its last red rose hips, looking like drops of blood against the gray bark.
The man was Mark Grant. He was perhaps in his mid-forties, with dark hair salted at the temples and a face that could only be described as serene. Not a cold serenity, but a measured, intentional one. He didn’t fidget when I entered. He didn’t offer the awkward, performative politeness that people usually weaponize in hospitals.
“Morning,” he said.
“Morning,” I replied, beginning to unpack my toothbrush and my bag of apples.
We didn’t talk. We didn’t fill the space with noise. He went back to his book, and I climbed into my bed, staring at a small crack in the ceiling that looked like a winding river. The fear was a physical entity now, settling under my ribs, rising to my throat whenever I thought of the mask and the count to ten.
Night fell early. Outside, the first snow began to fall—the kind you can’t see but can hear in the muffled, cotton-wrapped silence of the streets. I lay awake, my eyes wide in the darkness.
“Scared?” a low voice asked from the other bed.
Mark wasn’t asleep. His breathing was too deliberate.
“Yes,” I answered, my voice a mere splinter of sound.
“I was scared, too,” he said. “Three years ago, when I was first in a room like this.”
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