The sliding doors of the hospital hissed open as a barefoot seven year old girl staggered inside, her hands shaking as she pushed a rusty wheelbarrow across the polished floor. Her feet were cracked and bleeding, her lips dry, her eyes swollen with exhaustion. Inside the cart lay two newborn twin boys wrapped in a stained sheet, frighteningly still. When a nurse rushed forward and asked where their mother was, the girl’s voice barely carried as she said the words that froze the room. My mommy has been sleeping for three days. She would later explain she had walked for miles under the burning sun, alone, because her mother had once told her that if anything ever went wrong, the hospital would help.
Doctors moved fast. The twins were alive but hypothermic and dangerously dehydrated, minutes from slipping away. As machines beeped and hands worked urgently, the girl stood motionless, staring at the doors as if her will alone could keep her brothers breathing. When the doctor finally said they would survive, relief drained what little strength she had left. She collapsed onto the floor, her small body finally giving in after carrying a burden no child ever should. While staff stayed with her, police followed the vague directions she gave them to a blue house past a broken bridge.