“I got her help,” I said. “She needed it.”
“I told you I was fine!”
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One of the paramedics glanced at me, then at the neighbors.
“We’re concerned about hypothermia and her overall condition,” he said. “She needs an evaluation.”
The woman looked small suddenly. Her eyes filled with tears, and it was awful because now she wasn’t just angry. She was scared.
“I was fine,” she whispered. “They’re making it sound worse than it is.”
“They’re not,” I said, quieter now. “You couldn’t even get to the door.”
“She needs an evaluation.”
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When they helped her into the ambulance, she said it one more time.
“This is your fault.”
Then the doors shut.
As the ambulance pulled away, the woman’s neighbors turned on me.
A woman crossed her arms. “You had no right. She’s lived here longer than you’ve had that job, and now you’re taking that away from her? Who do you think you are?”
“This is your fault.”
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I felt the heat rise in my face. “She had no heat. Her fridge was empty.”
“She’s always been like that,” somebody muttered from the crowd.
“She’s stubborn,” another voice said.
I turned toward them so fast that I almost lost my balance on the icy grass. “Then why didn’t you help her?”
I didn’t wait for an answer. I got back in my car and drove away with my hands shaking on the wheel.
But after that night, everything changed.
“Then why didn’t you help her?”
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Every dark porch made me pause. Every old person living alone made me want to ask questions that weren’t my business.
And in the back of my head, every single shift, I heard her voice.
This is your fault.
I kept telling myself I’d done the right thing, but nothing about what I’d done felt right anymore.
Then, a week later, the consequences of the choice I made that night finally caught up to me.
Nothing about what I’d done felt right.
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I was folding boxes in the back when my manager leaned through the kitchen window and yelled, “Kyle, delivery up. They asked for you.”
I grabbed the slip and froze.
It was that older lady’s address.
***
When I pulled up, the porch light was on.
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