Eight specialists stood in a quiet semicircle around the hospital bed, their faces dim under the cold white lights.
No one spoke.
There was nothing left to say.
The heart monitor stretched a single green line across its screen.
Unbroken.
Flat.
A sound lingered in the room—not loud, not dramatic. Just a long, empty tone that seemed to press against the walls and settle into the bones of everyone standing there.
The five-month-old son of billionaire Richard Coleman had just been declared clinically dead.
For a moment, even time seemed unsure of itself.
Machines worth millions had been used. Advanced imaging. Emergency protocols. Teams of experts who had spent decades studying the human body down to its smallest secrets.
And still… they had failed.
Downstairs, far from polished floors and controlled air, a boy pushed through the revolving doors of the private hospital entrance.
He didn’t belong there.
You could tell from a distance.
His clothes were worn thin, his sneakers split at the sides, and a large black trash bag—half full of plastic bottles—hung from his shoulder. He carried it the way other children carried schoolbags.
His name was Leo.
He paused just inside the entrance, blinking at the brightness, his eyes adjusting to a world that wasn’t built for him.
People stared.
Some frowned.
A nurse approached him immediately.
“You can’t be in here,” she said, her voice sharp but tired. “This area is restricted.”
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