Mum Demanded £5,000 While My Son Lay Alone In Intensive Care-heuh

No one tells you how ordinary a hospital sounds on the morning your child is taken to theatre.

The lift doors still ping.

The vending machine still hums.

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A kettle clicks off somewhere behind the nurses’ station, and a porter still says sorry when he moves past with a trolley.

I stood in the paediatric cardiac wing with Caleb’s small hand tucked inside mine, watching the automatic doors open and close.

Other families came through them.

Grandparents with overnight bags.

A father carrying a stuffed rabbit.

A woman in a damp coat balancing two cups of tea, already crying before she reached the child she had come to see.

Every time those doors opened, Caleb looked up.

Every time they closed, his face tried not to fall.

He was seven years old.

Seven is old enough to remember promises, but young enough to believe people only break them by accident.

Caleb had been born with a heart defect, and for years I had learned to live by hospital letters, appointment cards, medicine alarms, and the quiet fear that sat beside his bed at night.

The doctors had hoped to keep managing it.

I had hoped harder than anyone.

Then the consultant said surgery could not wait.

His operation was booked for 6:30 a.m.

My mum, Patricia, knew.

My sister, Vanessa, knew.

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