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I answered every question honestly, my handwriting getting messier as I went.

When I finished, I brought the clipboard back to the desk.

The receptionist smiled again. “Thank you. Someone will call you back in just a moment.”

I sat back down.

Waited.

My phone buzzed.

A text from Amai.

Good luck today.

I stared at the message.

He remembered.

Of course he remembered.

I typed back:Thanks.

Then deleted it.

Typed:I’m nervous.

Deleted that too.

Finally settled on:I’m here.

Three dots appeared immediately.

You’ll be fine. Call me if you need anything.

I didn’t respond.

Just locked my phone and shoved it back in my purse.

“Truth Renois?”

I looked up.

A nurse stood in the doorway, holding a tablet.

“That’s me.”

“Come on back.”

The exam room was small and sterile—white walls, a paper-covered table, a rolling stool, a counter lined with medical supplies I didn’t want to look at too closely.

The nurse took my vitals—blood pressure, pulse, weight.

“Dr. Beaumont will be in shortly,” she said, then left.

I sat on the table, the paper crinkling beneath me, and tried not to think about what was coming next.

The door opened.