The man whose motorcycle put my son in the hospital showed up again today.
And for a moment, I honestly wanted to kill him.
It had been forty-seven days since everything fell apart.
Forty-seven days since my twelve-year-old son, Malik, was hit while crossing the street.
Forty-seven days since he slipped into a coma.
And for forty-seven days, the man who rode that motorcycle had been sitting in the same chair in my son’s hospital room.
Every single day.
Like he belonged there.
The first week, I didn’t even know his name.
The police told me the basics. A motorcycle hit my son. The rider stopped immediately. He called for help, started CPR, stayed with Malik until the ambulance arrived.
They said he wasn’t speeding.
They said he wasn’t drunk.
They said Malik had run into the street chasing a basketball.
None of that mattered to me.
All I knew was that my son wasn’t waking up.
The doctors kept saying the same things over and over. His brain had swollen from the impact. We had to wait. Sometimes coma patients could still hear voices.
“Talk to him,” they said.
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