The hospital room was so quiet that you could hear the monitor ticking like a clock, marking time, a time that seemed to matter to no one. Michael lay motionless, his face pale, a thin tube in his nose, his chest rising and falling weakly as the machines did the work his body couldn’t. Nurses came and went, some murmuring, others sighing, but none of them seemed interested in the patient in front of them. There were no flowers, no cards, not even a phone call to inquire about his condition.
Once, the doctor asked, “Has anyone come to visit you?” And a nurse replied gently, “They were notified, but they never came.” Time passed slowly; day turned to night, and night to weeks, while Michael remained trapped in his silent prison of unconsciousness. He dreamed of voices. His mother’s soft lullabies, his father’s proud laughter… But these were lies his brain told him while he slept. In reality, his parents had vanished like cowards into the shadows, convinced he would never open his eyes again.
Meanwhile, in another part of town, his parents, Richard and Clare, were in a law office, their eyes wide with greed and their hands trembling. “The will says that if he’s incapacitated or dead, the assets will be transferred,” Richard said in a low, almost exultant voice. Clare didn’t even try to feign sadness. “I can’t believe all this is happening so fast,” she said, fanning herself with a legal document. “The house, the business, the savings, everything he worked for…”
Not a word of concern for their son. Not a single thought about his well-being. They were focused only on the inheritance they thought they would receive. Not once did they come near the hospital where Michael was fighting for his life, where he was slowly bleeding out with no one to support him. They had made their decision: the inheritance was worth more than their own son’s existence. “It’s a shame,” Richard said, shaking his head with mock sadness. “He was a brilliant boy, but life goes on.” With those words, they signed the papers and toasted with champagne, convinced they had outlasted their son and gained something from his fall.
Three months later, on a humid Friday afternoon, Michael opened his eyes. He blinked slowly, confused and weak, staring at the sterile room around him. “Mom,” he whispered, but there was only silence. A nurse stopped dead in her tracks when she saw him awake. “Michael, my God, you’re awake! You made it,” she exclaimed as she ran to press the call button.
