Doctor Touched A Boy’s Cast And Knew It Was Never Medical-heuh

The rain had started before the evening rush properly ended, tapping against the hospital windows with the patient insistence of something nobody had time to notice.

Inside the paediatric emergency unit, the air smelt of wipes, damp coats and tea left too long in paper cups.

I had worked enough late shifts to know the rhythm by heart.

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A child crying behind one curtain.

A parent apologising because they had parked badly or arrived without the right form.

A nurse calling another name from the waiting area while everyone looked up, hopeful for half a second, then dropped their eyes again.

You learn to move through that noise without letting it harden you.

You learn that fear in a child has many faces.

Some children scream before anyone touches them.

Some go silent.

Some joke because joking gives them one tiny piece of control.

Some stare at their parents as if asking permission to be brave.

Mason Hale did none of those things.

His chart looked almost dull when it landed in my hands.

Five years old.

Recent arm injury.

Low-grade fever.

Discomfort overnight.

A cast already in place.

The ordinary explanation was simple enough: swelling, irritation, possible infection, perhaps the cast too tight or badly fitted.

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