Every step repeated the same thought in her mind:

That was it. That was my chance.

The interview had been at 10:00 a.m. sharp — a nursing position at a private medical center with real benefits, stable hours, and a salary that could finally give her and her seven-year-old son room to breathe. She had prepared for weeks. Practiced answers in the mirror. Printed extra copies of her résumé.

And then she saw the elderly woman collapse on the subway platform.

Hannah hadn’t hesitated.

By the time the ambulance arrived and she finished giving her statement to paramedics, it was nearly noon.

Opportunity doesn’t wait.

Neither does rent.

At their apartment, the faint smell of reheated tomato soup lingered in the air. The place was small but neat — second-floor walk-up, chipped paint near the window, curtains Hannah had sewn herself.

She placed her folder gently on the kitchen table. The papers slid halfway out, as if they were trying to remind her they still mattered — even if the future they promised had slipped away.

Ethan dropped his backpack beside a chair and climbed onto it, his sneakers dangling.

“Mom,” he asked carefully, “are you upset?”

Hannah forced a soft smile.

“No, sweetheart. Just a little tired.”

She filled the kettle and made coffee she didn’t actually want. The refrigerator hummed behind her, decorated with Ethan’s crayon drawings and a row of clipped bills: rent, electricity, after-school care.

Numbers that never cared about kindness.

That afternoon, she checked her email once.

Then twice.

Then she stopped.

If they were interested, they would have called by now.

The next morning came faster than she was ready for.

She was kneeling to tie Ethan’s shoelaces when her phone vibrated across the counter. Unknown number.

Her stomach tightened.

“Hello?”

“Is this Hannah Brooks?” a composed male voice asked.

“Yes, this is she.”

“My name is Daniel Whitaker.”

The name meant nothing — until it suddenly did.

“My mother fell yesterday at the Atlantic Avenue station. You stayed with her.”

Hannah straightened.

“Oh. Yes. Is she okay?”

“She’s stable,” he replied. “Mild concussion, some bruising. The doctors said she was fortunate someone with medical training was there.”

Hannah closed her eyes briefly, relief washing through her.

“I’m glad she’s alright.”

There was a brief pause on the line.