The Barefoot Girl, the Billionaire’s Son, and the Lie in the Lobby-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Barefoot Girl, the Billionaire’s Son, and the Lie in the Lobby-nga9999

The scream reached the hospital lobby before the girl did.

“Stop that girl! She stole that child!”

For one suspended second, St. Catherine’s Children’s Hospital became perfectly still.

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The receptionist’s hand hovered above the phone.

A nurse stopped beside the desk with a stack of intake forms pressed to her chest.

A man near the elevator lowered the coffee cup he had just paid six dollars for and stared at the revolving doors.

Then the girl stumbled through them.

She was barefoot.

Her feet were black from pavement and grass, and the hem of her yellow T-shirt was torn near one shoulder.

A cardboard candy box hung from a string around her neck, knocking against her ribs every time she took another desperate step.

In her arms was a little boy in a navy polo shirt and expensive sneakers.

He did not move like a sleeping child.

He moved like a child whose body was losing the strength to fight for air.

His lips were blue at the edges.

His head sagged against the girl’s collarbone.

His chest lifted in shallow pulls that seemed to get smaller every time the lobby lights flashed across his face.

“Help him,” the girl gasped. “Please. He can’t breathe.”

The lobby did what public rooms often do when a poor child enters carrying trouble.

It judged the poor child first.

“Security!” the receptionist shouted. “She came in off the street with somebody’s child.”

The girl’s eyes went wide.

“No, ma’am. I found him. He fell down in the park. He said he couldn’t—”

A guard came fast across the floor.

“Put him down.”

“I can’t,” she cried. “He told me not to let go.”

She nearly collapsed before anyone touched the boy.

Her knees bent, the candy box swung, and the boy’s face slipped lower against her arm.

Somehow she held him tighter.

A doctor in a white coat heard the panic in her voice before the rest of the room understood the danger.

Dr. Samuel Reed pushed between a nurse and a waiting father, dropped to one knee, and touched two fingers to the boy’s neck.

His face changed.

That was the first true warning.

“Gurney. Now,” he snapped. “Severe allergic reaction, possible shock. Move.”

Two nurses ran.

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