Boy Paid £12 In Bottles, Then The Doctor Saw His Face-heuh

A boy arrived with twelve pounds and empty bottles to have his broken leg treated, but the doctor discovered he was the son who had been taken from her five years earlier: “Don’t hit me, I’ll be good.”

The nurse had been halfway through stacking the last files when the little boy appeared at the door.

He did not knock.

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He simply stood there in the rain, one shoulder pressed to the frame, his right leg held stiffly behind him as though even the floor had become something to fear.

“If you can’t pay,” the nurse said, tired and not looking properly at him yet, “then at least leave the bottles and go.”

The boy’s fingers tightened around the handles of the plastic carrier bag.

“I can pay,” he whispered.

That was when I looked up.

I had been locking the medicine cabinet, already thinking about the cold tea waiting in the back room and the stack of notes I still had to finish before morning.

My clinic sat at the edge of town, in an old rented shopfront with a brass bell above the door and a waiting room that always smelt faintly of antiseptic, damp coats and over-boiled coffee.

It was not grand.

It was not fashionable.

But it was mine.

For years, that had been enough.

Then the child stepped properly into the light.

Rainwater ran from his hair and down the side of his face.

His T-shirt was too large, the collar stretched wide enough to reveal one sharp collarbone.

His trainers were split at the toes, and each time he shifted his weight, water tapped onto the old tile floor.

He looked five, perhaps a little older if hunger had done what hunger does and made him smaller.

“Doctor,” he said, staring at my badge rather than my face. “Can you fix me?”

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