For three months, Sarah’s family never came to the hospital—until her mother noticed her name on the pediatric wing.-iwachan

“Sarah… why didn’t anyone tell me you were—”

Her mother stopped there.

The sentence broke in the doorway like even she could hear how wrong it sounded.

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Sarah stayed beside the therapy bars, one hand locked around the cool metal rail.

Her legs were shaking.

Not from fear.

Not anymore.

The therapist had stepped back, quiet enough to disappear.

Nurse Jennifer stood near the wall, watching Sarah’s face instead of the woman in the doorway.

That small choice felt like protection.

Sarah’s mother, Elaine Williams, looked older than she had at Christmas.

Her makeup was done, but uneven at the corner of one eye.

She clutched her purse the way women do when they are trying to hold themselves together in public.

“Why didn’t anyone tell me you were here?” Elaine finally whispered.

Sarah almost laughed.

The sound rose in her chest, caught on the place where the punctured lung still made every breath feel borrowed.

“Because you didn’t ask,” Sarah said.

Elaine blinked.

That was the first blow.

Not a shout. Not an accusation.

Just a fact.

“I called,” Elaine said quickly. “I mean, I thought about calling. Amanda said you were probably traveling again.”

Sarah watched her mother search for a version of the truth that would not make her look cruel.

“She said you were busy,” Elaine added.

“I was in a coma.”

The room went still.

Even the soft beeping from the monitor seemed louder after that.

Elaine’s eyes moved to Sarah’s wrist, then to the compression brace around her torso, then to the walker folded near the bed.

It was the first time she seemed to see the injuries instead of the name.

“A coma?”

“Six weeks.”

Elaine’s hand tightened around the purse strap.

“No one told me that.”

Sarah looked at her mother for a long moment.

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