She Chose My Sister’s Couch Drama Over My Surgery—Then Saw The Deed-hihehu

The fluorescent lights over my hospital bed made a thin electric sound, the kind that gets under your skin when you are already trying not to panic.

The room smelled like antiseptic, warm plastic, and cold metal.

Somewhere beyond the curtain, rubber soles squeaked across polished floor, a monitor chirped, and a tray rattled hard enough to make me flinch.

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My phone was warm in my palm when my mother finally answered.

She did not say, “Are you okay?”

She did not ask if they had taken me back yet.

She did not ask whether I was alone.

She said Emma was very upset right now, and this was not the time to be dramatic.

For a second, I just stared at the ceiling tiles and counted the pinprick black dots in them so I would not come apart before the anesthesia got to me.

I was thirty-two years old, wearing a hospital gown that did not close properly at the shoulder, with an IV taped into my hand and a consent form already signed beside my hip.

And my mother sounded like I had interrupted her while she was fluffing a throw pillow.

That was the part that almost made me laugh, except laughing hurt too much.

I knew that tone.

She had used it when I limped home at eight with a swollen ankle and she told me to stop scaring Emma.

She had used it when I was seventeen and standing beside a dented car on the shoulder of the road, shaking so hard I could barely hold the phone.

She had used it when I was twenty-eight and a specialist said the surgery needed to happen sooner rather than later, and my mother asked whether I had checked if Emma needed help moving that weekend.

In our family, calm only belonged to the person least afraid.

I told her they were taking me in in ten minutes.

I told her I only wanted to hear her voice before they started.

There was a pause.

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