He Ignored His Brother’s 8:15 Text—Then The Hospital Sent One Message-yumihong

The garage gate was still lifting when Daniel backed out too fast and clipped the yellow curb with his rear tire.

The sound cracked through the car like a warning.

He did not stop.

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Rain washed over the windshield in hard silver lines. The wipers scraped left, right, left, right, never fast enough. His phone sat in the cup holder, screen still glowing with the message from St. Mercy Emergency Department.

Please come to Family Room 3.

Daniel had seen enough television to know hospitals did not send people to family rooms for minor things.

He drove with both hands locked on the wheel. His knuckles looked pale under the dashboard light. His tie hung loose against his chest. The smell of old coffee, damp wool, and stress sweat filled the car. Caleb’s faded baseball cap slid under the passenger seat every time Daniel braked.

At the first red light, he reached down and grabbed it.

The cap was soft from years of use. The brim was bent, the stitching near the back strap coming loose. Caleb had worn it to minor league games, bad first dates, and the Fourth of July barbecue where he spilled barbecue sauce down Daniel’s shirt and laughed so hard he had to sit on the curb.

Daniel pressed the cap against the passenger seat.

The light turned green.

Behind him, someone honked.

He drove.

At 7:42 p.m., Aaron called again.

Daniel answered before the first ring finished.

“I’m coming,” he said.

Aaron’s voice sounded far away, muffled by hallway noise.

“Where are you?”

“Ten minutes.”

There was a pause.

Then Aaron said, “Daniel, don’t hang up.”

Daniel’s foot eased off the gas.

“Why?”

“Just don’t.”

The road narrowed near the hospital district. Ambulance lights flashed ahead, red and white against wet pavement. Daniel’s stomach tightened so hard he had to swallow twice.

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