Boy Begged Doctors To Break His Cast — Then Security Was Called-heuh

A 12-year-old boy kept whispering, “Something inside my cast isn’t mine” — and when doctors finally opened it, hospital security was called immediately.

By the time Mason Reed was brought back into the children’s emergency unit, the rain had already soaked through his father’s coat and turned the hospital entrance into a strip of shining grey pavement.

Andrew Reed had carried worry in silence for most of the week, the way tired parents often do, but that night it had hardened into something he could no longer explain away.

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His son was sitting on the bed with his knees drawn up, pale under the ward lights, guarding his right arm as if the black cast around it were not a treatment but a threat.

Every few seconds, Mason touched the cast with the fingers of his good hand.

He did not scratch at it the way children usually scratched a plaster cast when they were itchy or bored.

He felt along the surface carefully, almost fearfully, as if tracking something beneath it.

“Please,” he whispered. “Somebody cut it off.”

Andrew looked at the nurse, then back at his son.

The nurse had been kind from the moment they arrived, but kindness was not the same as certainty.

She had checked Mason’s temperature twice, adjusted the monitor, asked about pain levels, and written notes on a clipboard with a calmness that made the room feel both safer and more frightening.

Across from the bed, Claire Bennett sat with a paper cup of tea held between both hands.

It had been bought from the hospital machine half an hour earlier and left untouched.

A faint steam had once lifted from it, but now the surface was dull and still.

Claire had offered to fetch it because people always did something practical when there was nothing useful left to say.

Yet Andrew had noticed she had not taken a single sip.

Mason’s cast had been fitted after what everyone had been told was a simple accident.

A fall from his bicycle on the way home.

An awkward landing.

A minor fracture.

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