The Crumpled Hospital Form In That Dark Bedroom Exposed Why The Store Manager Wanted Her Gone-thuyhien

Headlights swept across the broken blinds, turning the damp wall white for one sharp second. My phone vibrated in my hand.

Melissa.

I answered before it finished the first ring.

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“Alex, I’m three minutes out,” Dr. Melissa Greene said. I could hear a siren far behind her voice. “Do not let that mother drink anything. Keep the child warm. Are the babies conscious?”

“One is crying. I haven’t seen the second yet.”

“Then find him now.”

I moved past Lucy into the front room. The laundry basket on the loveseat shifted again under the towel. I peeled it back.

Two babies. Both boys. Both too still.

The smaller one had a weak little fist pressed under his chin. The other had gone quiet except for a dry, irritated breath every few seconds. Their cheeks were hollow in that way babies’ faces should never look. One bottle lay on the floor under the couch, cloudy with old formula and ringed yellow at the bottom.

Lucy came running back with one can still in her arms.

“Eli cries louder,” she said quickly, pointing to the one on the left. “Noah just sleeps.”

The way she said it told me she had already learned to separate emergency from emergency.

I set the can on the table, took off my jacket, and wrapped both babies inside it as best I could. The room smelled like wet sheetrock, fever sweat, and old milk.

Melissa came through the door at 8:35 p.m. with two paramedics and a pediatric bag swinging from her shoulder. Her dark hair was pulled back tight, rainwater still shining at her temples. She crossed the room, took one look at the woman on the mattress, and her whole face changed.

“How many days since delivery?” she snapped.

Lucy stared at her.

“I don’t know.”

Melissa dropped to the floor beside the bed, two fingers to the woman’s neck, then to her abdomen through the blanket. “She’s burning up. This is postpartum. Untreated.”

One paramedic went to the babies. The other was already opening an IV kit.

Melissa looked at me. “She should have been back in a hospital yesterday.”

The woman’s eyelids fluttered. Her mouth moved once before any sound came out.

“Lucy?”

“I’m here, Mom.”

The little girl was on her knees again, not on marble this time, but on warped linoleum with water marks curling at the edges. She held the formula can out with both hands like an offering.

“I got it,” she whispered. “I got both.”

The woman turned her head an inch. That was all she could manage. Her gaze fell on the can. Then on me. Then on the paper in my hand.

Her lips cracked when she tried to speak.

“Did she… go to Richard’s store?”

Melissa glanced up at me. I did not answer right away. I only held the crumpled discharge packet where the woman could see it.

She closed her eyes.

That told me enough.

By 8:49 p.m., the paramedics had the twins wrapped in thermal blankets and their mother on a stretcher. One of the babies started crying with a thin, angry sound that filled the room like something small refusing to quit. Lucy flinched toward him at once.

“I’m coming too,” she said.

The paramedic tried to tell her she needed shoes first.

She lifted one bare foot and set it down again like she had forgotten shoes were things other children owned.

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