It was nearly noon when the girl arrived at Northbridge General Hospital.
The heat shimmered on the pavement; the air clung to everything like a heavy cloth.
Her name was Alina Cresswell, though she didn’t offer it at first.
She pushed a battered wheelbarrow whose single wheel squeaked at every turn.
Inside lay two infants wrapped in pieces of cloth that once had been bright — now stiff and dull with residue.
The babies were terribly still.
Their breathing was faint.
Their lips were pale as frost.
Alina herself looked as if she had walked through a storm — hair tangled, feet torn, small hands streaked with grit. She didn’t cry or plead. She simply tugged the sleeve of the first adult she saw in uniform.
The Nurse Who Listened
Nurse Gertrude Malik had seen many emergencies, but none like this: a tiny child with a wheelbarrow and two nearly lifeless babies.
For a heartbeat her breath caught — then instinct took over.
She called for help, lifted the infants, and guided Alina through the emergency doors.
The girl clung to her hand with surprising strength and didn’t release it until the twins disappeared behind swinging doors.
Gertrude crouched to meet her gaze.
Alina stared at the closed doors as if sheer will might keep her siblings alive.
Her silence spoke louder than any scream.
The Battle to Save Them
Inside, Dr. Harlan Kapoor, the pediatrician on duty, moved fast.
The babies were severely dehydrated, their temperatures perilously low.
Warming units.
IV fluids.
Monitors flashing in rapid rhythm.
After long minutes that felt like hours, Dr. Kapoor emerged.
“They’re alive,” he told Gertrude quietly. “Both of them. They arrived just in time.”
Alina exhaled a sound barely audible — relief that trembled into exhaustion.
Then her knees gave way, and she fainted into Gertrude’s arms.