Collection Rise Chapter 34

Collection Rise Chapter 34

Chapter

The smell of disinfectant hit me like pushed open the doors of Cleveland Medic Center, and a decade felt like a lifetime ago

The greenery in the hallway, the layout of the nurse’s station, even the faded marks on the wallseverything felt inexplicably familiar

My father said I had amnesia, but why did everything feel etched deep within me

Ms. Cohen, the vegetative patient ward is on the fifth floor,the doctor accompanying me said softly

There’s a caregiver there, quite special. Over the years, the survival rate of the patients he’s cared for has been the highest in the entire hospital.” 

1/10 

The elevator doors opened, and a wave of warmth rushed toward me

Sunlight streamed through the 

floortoceiling windows at the end of the corridor, casting golden streaks across the floor

In the distance, a figure was bending over, turning a patient gently

His movements were light, as if handling something fragile, a treasure

His resume is mysterious,” the doctor continued

Ten years ago, he suddenly came to apply, saying he wanted to specifically care for vegetative patients. The hospital, impressed by his sincerity, decided to keep him. No one 

2/10 

Chapter

expected his care skills to be extraordinary.” 

I stood at the door of the ward. Time had etched too many marks on him

Those hands, once flipping through business contracts, were now clumsily yet 

wiping the patient’s forehead

arnestly 

He gently lifted the patient’s head, adjusted the pillow, and carefully combed their hair

Every movement felt like performing a sacred ritual

The most incredible part is,” the doctor lowered his voice, every patient he’s cared for has shown exceptionally stable vital signs. The families all say he has some sort of magic, that even the most critical patients seem to regain a bit of life when he’s around.” 

3/10 

He turned, and our eyes met

Memories surged like a tidal wave. The office on a rainy night, the blinding lights of the operating room, his suit and tie, his cold words

Everything was so clear, so clear it hurt

He paused for just a moment, then lowered his head and walked past me. His steps were light, as though afraid to disturb someone’s dream

The white cuffs fluttered in a breeze, mixed with the faint scent of disinfectant

The nurse’s station called out to him, and he quickly walked away. His figure vanished around the corner of the hallway

4/10 

Ms. Cohen?A colleague’s voice snapped me back to reality

Would you like to see his care records? Many hospitals have been studying his methods.” 

I shook my head gently. I finally understood why my father kept saying I had amnesia

Some wounds, perhaps, can only be healed by forgetting

As the sunset dipped below the horizon, I passed by the ward once more on my way 

out

He was still there, massaging the arm of a newly admitted patient in a vegetative state

Beside the bed was a stack of medical journals, the cover pages filled with dense 

5/10 

notes on patient care. In the corner, an old photo frame lay upside down, its edges. yellowed with age

He’s always like this,” the head nurse said, walking over

Ten years, through all kinds of weather. He never even goes home for the holidays, says the most important thing for a vegetative patient is companionship during the holidays.” 

She paused for a moment. He always says, even though vegetative patients have no consciousness, they can still feel love and warmth.” 

Tears blurred my vision. This was probably the best ending

He spent his life atoning, and I healed 

6/10 

through forgetting

In this hospital, the place where we began, we had both transformed into the most unexpected versions of ourselves

He would never know that I remembered everything

Just as he would never know, the unborn childwho I believe would have been a girl

From the nurse’s station, I heard his soft humming

It was the lullaby I loved to hear when I was unconscious ten years ago

So he remembered. He had always remembered

One by one, the lights in the outpatient 

7/10 

building flickered on, just like the night we first met. But this time, we had finally learned to let go

In the long corridor of the hospital, his figure continued to move, bringing a little warmth to each sleeping life

I walked boldly into the night, never looking back

Some say forgiveness is harder than forgetting

But at this moment, I suddenly understood -what is truly hardest is to carry every memory and still move forward

END 

Collection Rise

Collection Rise

Status: Ongoing

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