Nurse Cancels Parents’ £12,000 Maui Transfer At Brunch-heuh

The first thing my mother said was, “You look tired.”

Not hello.

Not how are you.

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Not even the kind of polite little question people ask when they cannot be bothered with the answer.

Just tired.

She said it softly, almost sweetly, with the smile she wore whenever she was about to ask for money and expected me to thank her for needing me.

I had come straight from the children’s ward.

My shoulders still carried the pressed-in ache of twelve hours in scrubs, and my hair was twisted into a knot that had survived handover, alarms, one frightened father, two sick toddlers, and a cup of hospital coffee so bitter it felt like punishment.

Outside, the morning was grey and damp.

My coat had taken on that cold pavement smell you get when rain never quite commits to falling, but never quite leaves either.

Inside the restaurant, everything was bright, warm, and expensive.

The windows looked over the water.

Cutlery tapped against china.

A server moved past with a pot of coffee in one hand and a silver jug in the other, and somewhere behind me someone laughed as though life had always been kind to them.

At 5:38 that morning, a six-year-old boy had started breathing properly on his own.

His mum had held both my hands and cried into them, saying thank you over and over until I had to blink hard and tell her to sit down before her legs went.

I should have gone home after that.

I should have walked into my flat, kicked off my shoes, made tea I would forget to drink, and slept until the room turned dark.

Instead, I went to brunch.

Because some small, foolish part of me still believed that if I kept showing up, kept smiling, kept being useful, my family might eventually become the thing other people seemed to have so naturally.

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