It was supposed to be a quick stop at the hospital to pick up paperwork. Instead, I found a little boy sitting alone on the floor—and nothing about my life was the same after that. I never thought a simple trip to the hospital would completely undo me, then put me back together with a new purpose, all in the same afternoon.
That’s what happened when I met little Malik. It started with something boring and routine. I had been dealing with estate paperwork since my mom passed from cancer a month earlier.
And that day, I needed to pick up her final pathology records from the oncology department. I had already made three phone calls to coordinate with the hospital’s records office. I was finally told to swing by to collect the hard copies in person, but I did not want to go.
Just the idea of walking those hallways again made my stomach turn, but I knew I had to finish what she started. I had just collected the envelope, sealed and stamped with medical jargon I did not want to read, and was walking past the oncology ward when I saw him. He was a little boy, no more than eight, sitting all alone, curled up on the cold floor near the double doors.
The boy was clutching a worn-out backpack so tightly that the straps dug into his small arms. His eyes were red, his cheeks blotchy, and his body shook with each quiet sob. Everyone walked past him like he was invisible.
But seeing him stopped me cold. I crouched beside him and spoke gently, “Hey, buddy. What’s wrong?”
He did not look up right away.
When he finally did, his voice was so quiet I had to lean in. “I… I don’t want my mom to die,” he whispered with tear-streaked cheeks.
“She’s in there. She went inside and told me to wait here, but… I’ve been waiting a long time, and I don’t know what’s happening.
There’s no one else.”
He blinked fast like he was trying not to cry again. His small hands gripped his backpack tighter, as if it could somehow protect him. My heart broke.
I sat down beside him on the linoleum floor, ignoring the people staring. I did not care. This child was alone, and I was not going to be another adult who ignored him.
I could see the fear in his eyes, that pure, raw worry that no child should ever have to feel. “What’s your name?” I asked softly. “Malik.”
“Hi Malik.
I’m Millie. I know this place is scary. I understand.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇

