Part 1: The Night That Opened My Eyes
The hospital was quiet except for the faint buzz of the fluorescent lights and the distant hum of the freezer in the supply room. It was 4:12 a.m., and I was finishing my night shift in the ER when I saw him. His name was Elliot, he was about thirty, and he was standing at the discharge desk like someone had paused the world just for him to arrive.
He wore a thin hospital gown that barely covered his chest, and his jeans had been cut off in trauma. His boots were soaked through with a mix of blood and slush, the leather cracking under the wetness, and he held a pair of dry socks in his hands like they were treasures. Not just any treasures—the kind people guard for decades in stories or museums. He looked at me with a quiet sort of dread that made my stomach clench. Outside, the sidewalks were glazed in ice, empty, and hostile. The first bus wouldn’t arrive for another hour. There was no coat, no ride, no safe place waiting for him.
