By the time my shift ended, my hands smelled faintly of disinfectant and cheap soap, the kind that never quite leaves your skin no matter how long you stand at the sink.
The hospital had settled into its strange early-morning quiet, not peaceful exactly, only paused, as if every corridor were holding its breath until the next trolley came racing through.
I had been on my feet for nearly the whole night.

There had been a child with a fever that frightened his mother more than it frightened us, an old man who kept apologising for taking up a bed, a woman who gripped my sleeve and asked if she was going to die before I had even seen her scan.
That was life in emergency medicine.
People arrived at their worst, and we were expected to be our best.
After almost ten years, I had learnt to swallow fear, irritation, tiredness and hunger before a patient ever saw my face.
I could argue with a relative one minute, comfort them the next, then step behind a curtain and sign a form with hands that did not shake.
It was not because I was strong.
It was because the work allowed no other shape.
That morning, I wanted only three things: a shower, a clean shirt, and six uninterrupted hours in bed.
My overnight bag hung from my shoulder, heavier than it should have been, with a spare cardigan, a half-empty bottle of water, a folded packet of biscuits I had never managed to open, and the small mess of items that built up when a hospital became more familiar than home.
At the staff-room sink, my tea mug had been left behind by accident.
The tea inside it had gone cold hours earlier.
I remembered noticing the mug as I passed the doorway, thinking I ought to rinse it, then deciding I had given the hospital enough of myself for one night.
Outside, the air was damp and grey.
A fine drizzle clung to the pavement, turning the hospital lights into long smears across the ground.
The road beyond the gate was waking up.
A bus hissed somewhere in the distance.
Someone in a dark coat hurried past with a paper cup tucked under their chin.
For one minute, I was only a woman going home.
Then my phone rang.
I almost ignored it.
The sound had the exact pitch of duty, and every doctor knows that once duty calls your name, it rarely gives you back cleanly.
Still, I looked.
It was a colleague from the department.
I answered, pressing the phone close because the drizzle was gathering on the screen.
“Doctor Tô, hurry back,” he said, breathless in a way that made my spine straighten. “A critically injured patient has just been brought in. The head of the department wants you to immediately take part in the emergency.”
There are words that do not leave room for hesitation.
Critically injured.
Emergency.
Head of department.
My tiredness vanished behind reflex.
I turned at once, already calculating routes, theatres, equipment, hands, time.
I did not ask why they needed me after my shift.
I did not ask who else was there.
I had spent my career believing that when a patient was lying between life and death, every personal inconvenience became very small.
My shoes had just changed direction on the wet pavement when the first line appeared.
It was not on my phone.
It was not on a wall.
It was in the air in front of my eyes, as bright and steady as a message pinned to the world.
【Don’t go into the operating theatre! Absolutely do not participate in this emergency!】
I stopped.
The rain seemed to grow louder.
For a second I thought the light from the hospital sign had caught in my eyes, or that exhaustion had turned into something frighteningly close to madness.
I blinked.
The words stayed.
Then more came.
【The patient has actually been dead for a long time. If you go in, you’ll be dragged into taking the blame for the director’s daughter!】
My mouth went dry.
I lifted my hand and rubbed my eyes so hard that sparks of colour burst behind my lids.
When I opened them, the comments were still there, floating above the path to the Emergency Department entrance.
【The patient has a very powerful family background. Not only have you been sentenced to death, but even your parents have been driven to suicide by jumping from a building!】
The world did not tilt dramatically.
No thunder cracked.
A damp hospital morning simply carried on around me while the worst warning of my life hung in the air.
A porter pushed an empty trolley through the automatic doors.
Someone laughed nervously by the smoking area.
A car rolled past the gate with its tyres hissing through shallow water.
I stood still, unable to decide whether I was terrified of the words or of the fact that I could read them.
I had seen hallucinations before in patients with fever, trauma, delirium, and grief.
I had treated people who heard instructions in empty rooms and saw threats in ordinary shadows.
I had always been kind, but I had also always been clinical.
Now I was the one standing in the rain, looking at impossible sentences that knew my life.
A new comment slid across my vision.
[It’s over. As soon as you enter the operating theatre, you’ll be declared responsible for the patient’s death.]
Another followed.
[They’re waiting for you to arrive as a scapegoat.]
Then another.
[The entire theatre will cover for Tang Yingxue — the director’s daughter. They’ll shift all blame onto you.]
I forgot to breathe.
Tang Yingxue.
Of all the names in the world, why hers?
We had been roommates for four years at university.
In our first term, when I had been too proud to admit I was struggling, she had quietly left summary notes on my desk and pretended she did not know I used them.
When she failed a mock practical exam, I had sat with her until two in the morning, making her repeat each step until she could do it with her eyes shut.
We had eaten noodles out of one saucepan, split taxi fares neither of us could afford, and promised each other that when we became doctors we would never turn into the kind of people who forgot why they had started.
She had been more than a friend.
She had been proof that ambition did not have to make a person cruel.
And now these impossible comments were telling me she would destroy me.
My first feeling was not hatred.
It was embarrassment.
That sounds absurd, but betrayal often begins that way.
Some part of me felt foolish for even considering it, as if accusing a friend in my own mind made me small and ugly.
I lowered my phone and looked back towards the hospital entrance.
The automatic doors kept opening and closing, releasing little bursts of bright light onto the pavement.
If I went in, I would pass the reception desk, the waiting area, the corridor with the cracked notice board, the lift, the theatre doors.
If this was a hallucination, every second I stood there was a second stolen from a patient.
If it was real, one step inside could ruin the rest of my life.
That was when I heard two people talking near the entrance.
They were not speaking to me.
They were the sort of strangers who share a rumour because a hospital makes everyone feel briefly connected to disaster.
“I heard a Bentley with licence plate 8888 crashed into the river,” one said.
“The owner’s been brought in here,” said the other. “Must be someone serious.”
I felt the cold go under my ribs.
A Bentley.
Licence plate 8888.
A river crash.
A patient with a family powerful enough for people to whisper about them before they were even through theatre doors.
The comments had said the patient’s background was not ordinary.
My phone vibrated.
A message appeared from Tang Yingxue.
“Jing Yi, where are you? Hurry up!”
Before I could decide how to respond, another came.
“Everything is ready for surgery. We are only waiting for you.”
Then a third.
“I’m outside the operating theatre waiting for you.”
Three messages.
Three pushes.
Three careful hands at my back.
I stared at them until the letters blurred.
The hospital had many doctors on duty.
The emergency rota was not built around one exhausted woman at the end of a night shift.
There were consultants, registrars, junior doctors, anaesthetists, nurses, technicians, people whose names were already on the board and whose hands were already scrubbed.
Why call me back so urgently?
Why specifically me?
Why would Tang Yingxue be standing at the theatre door before I arrived, as if her job were not to save a patient but to catch a person?
The sensible part of my mind tried to argue.
Maybe the case required my experience.
Maybe the patient was not dead.
Maybe Tang Yingxue was frightened and simply wanted a familiar colleague nearby.
Maybe the comments were nothing more than a broken brain begging for sleep.
Yet every explanation felt too thin to stand on.
In medicine, patterns matter.
One symptom can mislead you.
Two can be coincidence.
Three, four, five, all pointing in the same direction, demand attention.
And the pattern before me had teeth.
If I entered the theatre, I could already see how it would happen.
Someone would say I had taken over.
Someone would say I had made the final call.
Someone would produce a note, a chart, a timing mark, a signature line, a witness statement.
The patient’s family would need someone to blame, and the people above me would need someone who could be sacrificed without costing them too much.
A doctor with no powerful relatives.
A doctor who had come back after her shift.
A doctor who could be described as tired, careless, rushed, overconfident.
Me.
The unfairness of it was so complete that for a moment I almost laughed.
Not because it was funny, but because the trap was too neat.
My parents’ faces came to me then.
My mother standing in the kitchen, telling me to eat something hot before a shift.
My father pretending not to worry, then sending weather warnings whenever there was heavy rain.
They had never understood the details of my work, but they had trusted the dignity of it.
If I were branded responsible for killing someone important, they would not survive the shame easily.
The comments had said they would be driven to jump.
I did not want to believe that.
I could not afford not to.
My phone rang again.
Tang Yingxue’s name filled the screen.
I let it ring.
The sound was sharp and bright in the damp air, a small ordinary thing carrying an enormous threat.
I needed a reason not to go inside.
Not a weak excuse.
Not a missed call.
Not a claim of illness that could be doubted and picked apart later.
I needed something visible, immediate, undeniable.
Something that would make it impossible for anyone to say I had chosen not to help.
My eyes moved across the pavement.
Past the ambulance bay.
Past the row of bins near the service entrance.
Past a plastic sign half-tilted by the wind.
Then they found the opening.
The deep service shaft in front of the Emergency Department building had been uncovered for days.
Everyone knew it.
Staff had walked around it while muttering complaints.
Someone had placed warning barriers around it, but they were flimsy things, too light, too easily nudged, already spotted with rain and grime.
The proper cover had not yet been replaced.
I had stepped around that hazard three times during the week without thinking much about it.
Now I looked at it and felt a terrible, calm idea settle in my chest.
If they wanted me in theatre, I would become physically unable to enter it.
It was mad.
It was dangerous.
It might break me.
But the alternative might bury me alive while I was still standing.
A person makes choices differently when every door looks like a trap.
My phone stopped ringing, then immediately began again.
I did not answer.
Instead, I moved towards the entrance with quick, purposeful steps, as if the call had finally frightened me into obedience.
Anyone watching from inside would see a doctor hurrying back to duty.
Anyone reviewing a camera later would see the same.
My bag bumped against my hip.
My damp coat stuck coldly to my sleeves.
The hospital lights reflected under my shoes.
I angled myself slightly, lining my path with the opening in the ground.
My heart was beating so hard I could feel it in my teeth.
For one last second, the doctor in me rebelled.
I knew too much about injuries to pretend this was simple.
A fall could crack a skull.
A wrong landing could sever a spine.
There might be water, metal, broken concrete, infection, darkness.
I could die trying to avoid being framed for a death.
The thought was so absurd that it almost stopped me.
Then another message appeared on my phone screen as it vibrated in my hand.
“Jing Yi, answer me.”
That was all.
Not “Are you safe?”
Not “What happened?”
Answer me.
As if my silence were already a problem for her plan.
I slid the phone into my coat pocket.
I gripped the strap of my bag.
When I reached the edge of the shaft, I shut my eyes.
Some decisions are not brave.
They are simply the last available route.
I let my body fall.
The drop stole every sound at once.
For a fraction of a second, I was weightless.
The hospital lights vanished above me.
Cold air rushed past my face.
My stomach lurched as if it had been left behind on the pavement.
Then I hit the bottom.
Pain exploded white across my mind.
My shoulder struck first, then my hip, then my right leg twisted beneath me with a force that made the world narrow to one blazing point.
My head cracked against something hard enough to fill my ears with a thick, ringing silence.
For several seconds, I could not breathe.
The bottom of the shaft was dry.
That was the first clear thought I had.
Dry meant no water rising over my face.
Dry meant I might live.
The second thought was that my leg was wrong.
I did not need an X-ray to know it.
The pain had a deep, grinding quality I had heard patients fail to describe properly because no language is made for bone.
A low sound escaped me.
I pressed my lips together until I tasted blood.
No screaming.
No calling out.
If I had gone this far, I could not waste it by sounding alert and perfectly conscious.
My phone had flown from my pocket and landed just beyond my hand.
The screen was lit.
Tang Yingxue was calling again.
In the dark, that glow seemed almost intimate.
Her name sat there beside me like a person crouched at the bottom of the shaft.
I stared at it.
My hand twitched.
Every habit I had as a doctor told me to communicate, to report, to explain my condition, to help the team locate me.
Every instinct I had as a woman trying not to be destroyed told me to stay still.
How could an unconscious person answer the phone?
How could a person with a broken leg scrub in?
How could a scapegoat be placed inside a theatre she had never reached?
The call ended.
Another began.
Then another.
The sound bounced off the concrete walls until it became huge and ugly.
Above me, life continued.
Footsteps passed once, then faded.
A door opened and shut.
Rain ticked faintly somewhere near the rim of the shaft.
The smell below was dust, wet stone, old leaves and metal.
I lay there with my eyes closed, counting pain the way I once counted breaths for frightened patients.
In for two.
Out for two.
Stay quiet.
Stay alive.
After a while, I lost track of time.
It could have been five minutes.
It could have been half an hour.
Pain does not measure cleanly.
It stretches small moments until they feel like whole rooms.
I thought again of Tang Yingxue, and memory kept arriving in cruel little fragments.
Her laughing with a mouthful of noodles.
Her borrowing my notes and returning them with neat coloured tabs.
Her telling me that people like us had to work twice as hard because no one would carry us if we fell.
Had she meant it then?
Or had she always known there were people who would carry her and people she could step over?
A good friendship can blind you more thoroughly than hatred.
Hatred makes you watchful.
Love makes you explain things away.
The phone went silent at last.
That silence frightened me more than the ringing.
It meant something was happening without me.
In the theatre, perhaps they were waiting.
Or perhaps they had already begun to build the version of the story that required my presence.
I pictured a form placed on a table.
A box left blank for my signature.
A colleague saying, “She was called back.”
Another saying, “She agreed.”
Tang Yingxue standing with her hair tucked neatly into a cap, looking pale and tragic and untouchable.
I forced myself not to move.
Somewhere above, a metal object scraped against the pavement.
Voices approached.
Men’s voices, practical and annoyed.
“About time they got this sorted,” one said.
“Careful, the barrier’s shifted.”
Maintenance workers.
The missing cover.
Of course.
A pulse of relief went through me so sharply that it hurt.
They were here to replace the cover.
They were here later than anyone wanted and exactly when I needed them.
A bootstep came close to the edge.
Then another.
Someone stopped.
“What’s that bag doing there?”
My bag.
I had forgotten it was still above me.
There was a pause, then the rustle of someone leaning over.
A torch clicked.
Light cut into the shaft in a narrow white line.
It moved over the wall first, slow and uncertain, catching damp marks, dust, the rough concrete, the places where rain had left dark streaks.
I kept my eyes shut.
My breathing was shallow.
The light lowered.
It reached the floor.
It passed over my dropped phone.
For one second, the screen woke again.
Tang Yingxue’s name flashed in the torch beam.
The worker above sucked in a breath.
The light moved again.
Closer.
Closer.
Until it found my sleeve, my still hand, and the side of my face.
The worker shouted for help.
I did not open my eyes.
Because above me, beyond the rim of that dark shaft, the theatre doors were still waiting for a doctor who had never arrived.