After I woke up from the coma, the world felt… thinner. Like everything had been stretched just a little too far.
I stayed in the hospital for two more weeks, recovering. Days were full of nurses, machines, checkups. But nights were different.
Every night at exactly 11 p.m., she came.
A woman in scrubs. Mid-thirties, maybe. Calm eyes. Soft voice.
She’d sit in the chair beside my bed for exactly thirty minutes.
Not once did she check my vitals. Not once did she touch the monitors. She just talked.
About small things—weather, books, stories about patients who found their way back after worse odds than mine. Sometimes she asked me questions, and sometimes she just filled the silence when I didn’t have the strength to answer.
I didn’t question it at first. I thought she was just… kind.
But after a week, I asked one of the day nurses.
“Who’s the woman who comes in at night?”
She frowned. “What woman?”
“The one at eleven. She sits right there.”
The nurse exchanged a look with another staff member.
“No one’s assigned here at that hour,” she said carefully.
I laughed it off, but something in my chest tightened.
The next night, she came again.
“You asked about me,” she said, smiling faintly.
I hesitated. “Yeah.”
“That’s okay,” she replied. “You’re supposed to ask questions now. That means you’re getting better.”
There was something comforting about her. Familiar, even. Like I’d known her longer than just these quiet half-hours.
When I was discharged, I almost forgot to look for her. But on my last morning, as I packed my bag, something slipped out.
A folded note.
My name was written on the front in neat, careful handwriting.
I opened it slowly.
“You didn’t wake up alone. I was there the first time, too. You kept fighting—even when no one could hear you. I just reminded you of that.”
My hands trembled.
At the bottom was a name.
Lena.
The name hit me like a memory just out of reach.
Later that day, I asked my doctor if there had ever been a nurse named Lena.
He checked.
Then looked at me, puzzled.
“There was,” he said. “But she passed away two years ago. She used to work in this wing. Patients loved her.”
My throat went dry.
“People used to say she talked to patients even when they were unconscious,” he added. “Said she believed they could still hear.”
I left the hospital that day with more than just my life back.
Somehow, in the quiet space between waking and not waking… someone had stayed.
Not because they had to.
But because they believed I would come back.
And they were right.