The Wrong Group Text Brought My Supervisor to Room 6 Before My Family Sent Three Words-yumihong

At 5:12 a.m., the nurse held the tablet out over my blanket and waited.

The screen washed my hand blue. Mom’s name sat at the top under EMERGENCY CONTACT, her number still there like the last ten hours had not happened. Across the room, Martin was awake now, elbows on his knees, paper cup crushed in one fist, work boots dark against the waxed floor.

The IV tugged when I lifted my arm.

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The nurse said, quiet enough not to make it a moment, ‘We can keep the same contact if you want. We just need confirmation before they take you up.’

My thumb hovered over Mom’s name. The skin on my knuckle looked dusty under the fluorescent light. Dried blood still sat dark around two fingernails from where they had cut my shirt off and pressed me down on the bed.

Then I tapped Edit.

Mom disappeared first.

I typed Martin Reyes. The letters came slowly because my hand would not stop shaking. I added his number from the crew thread, hit Save, and watched the screen settle with his name at the top.

The nurse glanced at it once, then back at my face.

‘Do you want a second person listed?’

My eyes went to the empty chair by the wall, then to Martin, then back to the tablet.

‘One is enough,’ I said.

She nodded like she had heard something heavier than the words.

Before she took the tablet, I reached for my phone again. My banking app was still open from earlier, frozen on three repeating charges like they were permanent features of the month.

$417 — Derek’s truck note.
$186 — Mom’s prescriptions.
$92 — Melissa’s phone bill.

The hospital monitor kept answering the room with that same flat, patient beep. Bleach and stale coffee hung in the curtain fabric. Somewhere down the hall, somebody laughed too loud at a nurse’s station and got shushed.

My thumb hit each payment one at a time.

Pause.
Confirm.
Pause.
Confirm.
Pause.
Confirm.

No speech. No announcement. Just three small gray boxes turning from ACTIVE to ENDS TODAY.

By 5:19 a.m., all three were gone.

The orderly came for me at 5:47.

The ceiling lights rolled over my face in bright squares as they pushed the bed down the hall. Cold air slid under the thin gown and found every place the pain was waiting. The wheels rattled over a seam in the floor near Radiology. Metal doors opened. Closed. Opened again.

Martin kept pace beside the bed for as long as they let him.

He was still holding my truck keys.

‘You got people at your place?’ he asked.

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