Sister’s Lie Ruined My Life, Then She Needed My Blood-heuh

The first time my mother saw me after five years, I was not standing at a family table waiting for an apology.

I was under the white glare of emergency lights with my sister’s blood on my gloves.

The corridor outside A&E smelt of rain, disinfectant, and burnt coffee from a vending machine that had been coughing in the corner all night.

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A porter pushed past with a trolley of clean sheets.

A nurse was speaking quickly beside me, one hand pressed to the chart, the other already reaching for the phone to call theatre.

Then my parents appeared in the doorway.

Mum still had her damp coat buttoned wrong.

Dad had the stunned, hollow look of a man who had driven too fast through bad weather and arrived to find the world worse than he expected.

For one second, they did not recognise me.

Then Mum’s eyes climbed from my gloves to my face, and from my face to the stitched name on my white coat.

EMILY VANCE, MD.

CHIEF TRAUMA ATTENDING.

Her hand shot out and seized Dad’s arm.

I watched her fingers dig in.

Purple marks began to rise before either of them managed to say my name.

“Dr Vance?” the trauma nurse asked.

I turned back to the chart because I had a patient bleeding out in front of me, and because if I let my parents become people instead of bystanders, my hands might start shaking.

“Thirty-two-year-old female,” I said. “Blunt force trauma to the abdomen. Probable massive hepatic rupture. Pressure dropping. Get surgery on standby and start the transfusion protocol.”

The patient on the trolley made a sound behind the oxygen mask.

It was small, wet, frightened.

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