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Chapter 6 - Chapter Six: Don’t Cry Here

(Elara POV)

Hospitals smell the same everywhere.

Too clean. Too quiet. Like they're trying to hide how much pain lives inside their walls.

I leave work early that day.

Not because I want to — because my phone won't stop buzzing.

Mom

Mom

Mom

My hands shake as I press answer.

"Elara," my mother says. Her voice is thin. "The doctor wants to run a few more tests."

I already know what that means.

"I'm on my way," I say, grabbing my bag. "Don't worry."

I don't wait for permission. I don't tell anyone where I'm going.

I just leave.

The subway feels slower than usual. Every stop takes too long. Every delay feels personal. I stare at the digital board like I can force it to move faster if I try hard enough.

By the time I reach the hospital, my chest hurts.

Mom is sitting up in bed when I get there. She smiles when she sees me, and that somehow makes everything worse.

"You didn't have to rush," she says gently.

"I wanted to," I reply, pulling a chair closer.

The doctor comes in ten minutes later.

He uses careful words. Professional words. Words that sound hopeful if you don't know how to listen.

I know how to listen.

"Progression."

"Management."

"Next steps."

I nod like I understand everything.

When he leaves, I grip the edge of the chair until my fingers ache.

"It's fine," I say quickly when Mom looks at me. "We'll manage."

She reaches for my hand. Her grip is weak. "You shouldn't carry this alone."

I smile. "I'm not."

It's a lie.

When I leave the hospital later, the sky is already dark. I sit on a bench outside for a moment, my head in my hands.

Just breathe.

Just breathe.

My phone vibrates.

Mr. Hale

My stomach drops.

I stare at the screen for three seconds before answering.

"Yes, sir?"

"You left," he says.

Not accusing. Just factual.

"I'm sorry," I say quickly. "I had a personal matter."

There's a pause.

"Are you coming back?" he asks.

I look at the hospital doors behind me. At the people going in and out. At the weight sitting on my chest.

"I—" My voice catches.

I stop.

"I can be there tomorrow early," I say instead.

Another pause.

"Take the rest of the day," he says. "I'll handle it."

"Yes, sir," I whisper.

The call ends.

I sit there for a long moment afterward, phone still in my hand.

He didn't ask why.

He didn't push.

He didn't make it complicated.

And somehow, that makes my throat burn even more.

I stand up and wipe my face before anyone can see.

I don't cry at work.

I don't cry in front of people like him.

I wait until I'm home.

I sit on my bed, shoes still on, and let myself break quietly.

Just for a minute.

Then I pull myself back together.

Because tomorrow, I'll go back to Hale Industries.

I'll keep my head down.

I'll do my job.

And no one will know how close I came to falling apart on a hospital bench outside a building that never sleeps.

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