The Nurse Who Raised Her Saw What Was Stitched on the White Coat-felicia

The auditorium smelled like floor polish, paper programs, and weak coffee in paper cups.

Emily held her white coat over one arm and kept rubbing the embroidery above the pocket.

The thread was raised beneath her thumb.

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It felt like a name, but it also felt like proof.

Thirteen years earlier, Emily Higgins had sat in Room 314 at St. Jude’s Medical Center and learned that her body had betrayed her.

She was thirteen, small for her age, wearing a paper gown that scratched her knees and smelled like antiseptic.

Dr. Robert Lawson stood beside the bed with a tablet in his hand and the careful voice of a man who knew children could hear fear even when adults tried to hide it.

“Acute lymphoblastic leukemia,” he said.

He explained that it was serious, but treatable.

He said aggressive chemotherapy gave her a survival rate around eighty-five to ninety percent.

For one hopeful second, Emily waited for her mother to take her hand.

Her father asked, “How much?”

Thomas Higgins did not ask whether treatment would hurt.

He did not ask when it had to start.

He asked for the price.

Dr. Lawson explained that the full protocol usually lasted two to three years.

With insurance, the out-of-pocket cost could still land somewhere between sixty and one hundred thousand dollars.

Thomas laughed once.

“A hundred grand because she got sick?”

Karen Higgins looked at the wall like the diagnosis had embarrassed her.

Megan, sixteen and already treated like the family’s future, tapped on her phone and sighed.

Dr. Lawson talked about financial assistance programs, payment plans, and state resources.

Thomas talked about Megan applying to Stanford, Harvard, and Yale.

He talked about the one hundred and eighty thousand dollars in the college fund.

He talked about not wiping out Megan’s future over this.

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