The Visitor Log That Exposed What Her Family Did While She Was Dying-myhoa

The ceiling above Room 318 at Mercy General was so white it hurt to look at.

Maya Callaway did not understand that at first.

She understood the beeping beside her bed.

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She understood the dry scrape in her throat.

She understood that her body felt too heavy to belong to her, as if someone had packed concrete around every bone and left broken glass underneath it.

The room smelled like antiseptic, plastic tubing, and the cold metal of machines that had been working harder than some people in her life ever had.

A nurse was standing over her with kind eyes and a practiced stillness.

“Maya,” the nurse said gently. “You’re awake.”

Maya tried to answer, but all that came out was a cracked breath.

The nurse lifted a cup with a straw and held it close enough for Maya to sip.

Water touched her mouth like something from another planet.

The nurse’s badge said PATRICIA.

Maya stared at it because names were easier than memories.

Patricia checked the monitor, touched Maya’s wrist, and smiled in a way that was careful but real.

“You scared us,” she said.

Us.

That word landed first.

Then everything else began to surface in pieces.

A late client dinner.

The green light at Birchwood and Route 9.

Headlights coming from the wrong direction.

The sound of metal folding into metal.

Then nothing.

Maya closed her eyes, but the darkness behind them was not peaceful.

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