Eleven Minutes After Discharge, They Locked Me in the Garage-mdue - Chainityai

Eleven Minutes After Discharge, They Locked Me in the Garage-mdue

The crutch hit the hardwood before my body did, and the sound was so clean and sharp that my mind kept returning to it even as pain tore through my leg.

A metallic crack, a skid across polished floor, then the sickening drop of my own weight with nothing left to hold me.

That was the moment I understood Margaret had not lost her balance.

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She had aimed.

The house still smelled like the hospital discharge packet tucked under my arm, all plastic sleeve, copier paper, and the bitter antiseptic scent that seems to crawl into your hair after too many hours under fluorescent lights.

My left leg was locked in a brace from hip to ankle, the straps biting through my sweatpants, and every small movement sent a hot pulse up through the shattered femur the surgeon had just repaired.

The May air coming through the open front door should have felt soft.

Instead, it made me shiver.

Harrison’s SUV sat in the driveway behind me with its engine ticking as it cooled, and the front porch flag clicked softly against its bracket in the breeze.

It was such an ordinary sound that it almost made the room feel normal.

A quiet suburban house.

A husband carrying a hospital bag.

A wife trying not to cry because crying made the pain worse.

A mother-in-law standing in the entryway wearing my vintage silk robe like she had been waiting for a delivery that finally arrived.

I had been home for exactly eleven minutes.

Not close to eleven.

Not about eleven.

Eleven minutes since the hospital intake desk had scanned my wristband, processed the discharge sheet, and handed Harrison the printed medication schedule.

The nurse had looked him directly in the eye when she said, “She cannot put weight on that leg. Not even a little.”

Harrison had nodded with both hands around the folder, playing the role so perfectly I could almost understand why strangers trusted him.

“Don’t worry,” he had said. “I’ll take excellent care of her.”

The nurse had smiled with relief.

I had not.

By then, I had already learned that Harrison’s kind voice had settings.

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