A Billionaire Sat Beside a Forgotten Patient and Saw His Own Name-kieutrinh

The rain had already turned the hospital windows gray by the time Alexander Montero stepped off the elevator on the wrong floor.

He did not know it was the wrong floor yet.

His assistant had texted him a room number, a wing, and a reminder that his next call started in forty minutes.

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Alexander had glanced at the message between two missed calls, followed the hallway signs, and walked with the confidence of a man used to doors opening before he reached them.

He had spent most of his adult life being expected.

Boardrooms expected him.

Charity dinners expected him.

Reporters expected him.

Hospitals, when he entered them, usually expected checks with many zeroes and handshakes in quiet offices where nobody cried too loudly.

Room 409 did not expect him.

Room 409 barely expected anyone.

The hallway smelled like floor cleaner and reheated coffee, the kind that had been sitting in a pot too long.

A cart rattled somewhere near the nurses’ station.

A television murmured behind a half-open door.

Alexander looked down at his phone one more time, saw 409, and pushed the door open.

The woman in the bed had her eyes closed.

She looked smaller than the room around her.

The blanket had been pulled up neatly, but not lovingly.

The flowers on the windowsill had wilted into brown water.

An empty frame hung on the wall like someone had meant to put a picture there and then forgotten the person who would look at it.

Alexander stopped with one hand still near the door.

This was not the room he was supposed to enter.

He knew that immediately.

The person he had come to see was older, male, and connected to the hospital board.

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