The hospital waiting room feels chilling and sterile under the harsh fluorescent lights, the late afternoon sun casting long shadows outside the windows.
I press the bell beside the locked door to my daughter’s hospital room repeatedly, but no nurse comes to let me in.
My heart pounds in rhythm with each press, the sound echoing in the hollow space around me.
“You must wait,” a nurse tells me firmly, her eyes flicking away dismissively, as if my presence is a mere inconvenience.
Across these few yards, my sister slips past the nurses, disappearing behind that same door.
Her calm, assured demeanor contrasts sharply with my own mounting frustration.
A silent understanding seems to pass between her and the staff, one that excludes me entirely.
The rules here are unyielding, opaque.
Each day, I catch the bus across town to get to the hospital after work.
My routine is relentless: pick up groceries, ensure my daughter’s homework is done, and try to maintain a fragile peace with my sister, who’s recently moved in to help.
