It hit me then. That morning at breakfast, my brother had told me something.
He was going to spend the weekend hauling bricks at a construction site so he could buy Mom a birthday present. He'd made me promise not to tell.
And the hospital had said the boy was injured at a construction site.
The age matched too.
My mother blinked, then her brow furrowed.
"What did you just say?"
I held the phone up to her face.
"The hospital sent this photo. The person whose trachea was severed by falling glass at the construction site, the one waiting for me to operate, it's Hal!"
She glanced down at the screen, then slapped the phone out of my hand.
"Bullshit! Your brother's at home playing video games! I saw him this morning!"
"You faked this photo!"
"Mom, just call him! Please, I'm begging you!"
I was on my knees, fists clenched around the fabric of her pants.
"Hal is really hurt! I have to get to the hospital in fifteen minutes! Any later and it'll be too late!"
"Get off me!" She kicked my hands away.
"You'd curse your own brother just to wriggle out of this? Are you even human?!"
"Mom! I'm not lying!"
Tears blurred my vision, streaking hot down my face. "Let me go to the hospital! You'll see for yourself when we get there! If Hal's fine, you can drag me back and do whatever you want to me!"
A few bystanders nearby started whispering among themselves.
"That girl's crying for real..."
"What if it actually is her brother?"
My mother's expression shifted. She whipped around and pointed at them. "What do you people know? This girl's been a liar since she was little!"
"Now she's cursing her own brother just to get away! I've been too soft on her!"
She turned and glared at the guards.
"What are you standing around for? Take her to drink the medicine! If the gold doesn't come out, that's on you!"
Captain Paulson waved his hand.
"Take her."
Two guards hauled me up off the floor.
I twisted around, straining against them.
"Mom! I'm begging you! You're going to get him killed!"
My mother stood where she was, arms folded across her chest, eyes cold as glass.
"Go on. Keep acting. Let's see how long you can keep this up."
The guards shoved me into a chair and pushed the cup in front of me.
"Quit stalling. You drinking it yourself, or are we pouring it down your throat?"
I drew a long breath.
"Do you have any idea that if that patient dies, you'll be held responsible? What you're doing right now is killing someone."