The Missing Patient Wearing My Face Left One Note — And It Led Me To My Mother’s Locked Box-yumihong

The phone buzzed so hard against the metal desk that both of us looked down at it.

Blocked number.

The administrator’s hand moved first, quick and flat, like he meant to turn the screen face-down before I could see it. I picked it up anyway.

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A woman breathed once into the line. The sound was thin, scraped raw.

“Don’t let Adrian Pike close that file,” she whispered.

The man across from me went still.

My grip tightened around the phone. “Who is this?”

A cough crackled through the speaker. Somewhere behind her, I heard rain hitting glass and the rattle of an ice machine.

“Calder Street,” she said. “Blue box. Under the hall table.”

My mouth had gone dry. “How do you know where I grew up?”

The pause on the line lasted one beat too long.

Then she said, “Because I grew up without it.”

The call cut off.

The fluorescent lights hummed overhead. Adrian Pike’s badge swung once against his tie, then settled.

“You need to leave,” he said.

No softness. No paperwork. Just that.

“You know who she is.”

“She was never supposed to contact you.”

He said it before he could stop himself.

The room seemed to tilt a fraction. I set the phone down very carefully, like it might shatter if I moved too fast.

“Never supposed to?” I asked.

Adrian reached for the tablet. I put my hand over the screen.

His jaw tightened. “Ms. Harrow, this has become a restricted administrative matter.”

“Under my name.”

He pulled his hand back. “Leave the hospital.”

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