I Met the Nurse Who Once Took Care of Me—She Said, “You Were My Favorite Patient”....-mdue - Chainityai

I Met the Nurse Who Once Took Care of Me—She Said, “You Were My Favorite Patient”….-mdue

I never thought I’d see her again.

The nurse who once sat by my hospital bed and told me I’d be fine.

Years passed.

Life moved on until one ordinary afternoon, I heard her voice behind me in a crowded mall.

The way she looked at me and what she said next changed everything I thought I knew about timing, fate, and second chances.

I’m Edwin, 33, and I live in a modest one-bedroom in a quiet corner of Glendale, just outside Los Angeles.

I do operations for a regional logistics company.

Basically, I keep routes from falling apart and phones from exploding when a truck breaks down at 3:0 a.

m.

I run I cook the same three dinners on rotation, and I’m the guy who always returns shopping carts to the corral because leaving them loose makes me anxious.

That’s me, for better or worse.

Three years ago, I had a bad week that turned into a worse night.

A driver blew a red light and crumpled the front end of my car.

I made it out with a fractured wrist and a chest full of bruises, but I stayed in the hospital longer than I expected.

The part one still remember most isn’t the pain or the beeping monitors.

It’s a nurse named Chris, short for Christina, who moved like she already knew what I needed before I did.

She was steady and dry funny and kept nagging me to eat the jell-o I swore tasted like perfume.

When I got discharged, I thanked her and promised to mail a card.

I never did.

Life grabbed me by the throat again.

We didn’t see each other after that.

Sometimes when I drove past the hospital on the 134, I thought about sending that card and decided it was too late for a thank you that had missed its moment.

On a Saturday in early spring, I drove to the mall to replace earbuds I’d washed in the pocket of my hoodie.

The place was busy in that weekend way.

Kids with pretzels, couples negotiating over light fixtures, a piano version of some pop song sliding out of the ceiling.

I figured I’d grab coffee first.

The line at the cafe snaked past the stansions.

I scrolled through emails, pretending to be busy so I wouldn’t think about how long it was.

I noticed the woman in front of me because she had the calm posture of someone who never fights the line.

She just endures it.

Light denim jacket, hair pulled back, the kind of face that looks both alert and kind.

There was that feeling you get when you think you know a stranger from somewhere else.

An itch in the memory that won’t say its name.

She half turned to check the menu and our eyes flicked across each other’s faces.

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