Peach Muffins, A Hospice Warning, And The Folder She Never Expected-Teptep

There are doors in life that do not look frightening until they have closed behind you.

The hospice doors were like that.

They were glass, clean, quiet, and held open by a woman at reception who spoke gently because everyone who entered already carried too much.

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Dovy Hail walked through them with her son’s hand on her elbow.

Casius was thirty-eight.

He was disciplined, kind, and still worried about whether his mother had eaten, even while the illness was thinning him down to breath and bone.

That morning, he moved carefully, one slow step at a time, as though the floor had become something uncertain.

Dovy wanted to support him, but the truth was that Casius was still supporting her.

He always had.

He had been the child who rang back when he said he would.

He remembered birthdays without reminders.

He sent messages after appointments, even when the news had been bad, because he knew his mother would sit with the phone in her hand until it lit up.

Now she was walking him into a place where time was measured differently.

The room given to him was plain and bright, with clean sheets, a small cupboard, a chair for visitors and a window that looked out onto a strip of grey sky.

It smelt of linen, disinfectant, weak tea and endings.

Dovy unpacked because unpacking gave her something ordinary to do.

She folded shirts that Casius would probably not wear again.

She put his water where he could reach it.

She checked his phone charger twice.

She smoothed a blanket that did not need smoothing.

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