My Son Fell into a Coma After a Walk with His Dad – In His Hand Was a Note: ‘Open My Closet for the Answers, but Don’t Tell Dad’

My Son Fell into a Coma After a Walk with His Dad – In His Hand Was a Note: ‘Open My Closet for the Answers, but Don’t Tell Dad’

The nurse came in quietly.

I coaxed his fingers open, heart pounding.

The handwriting was unmistakable.

“Mom, open my closet for the answers. BUT DON’T TELL DAD!”

The words read like a warning.

My chest tightened.

Why wouldn’t he want Brendon to know? I smoothed the paper flat and bent close to his ear.

“Okay, sweetheart. I promise I won’t,” I whispered. “I’ll find out what you need me to know.”

The nurse checked his vitals and smiled softly. “Go home and get some rest. We’ll call you if anything changes. He’s stable for now.”

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My chest tightened.

I squeezed Andrew’s hand. “I’ll be back in the morning,” I whispered. “I love you, bud.”

Outside, the parking lot was slick with rain, streetlights glinting on the pavement. I slid behind the wheel, the note still pressed in my palm.

**

When I finally stepped inside, the house was still and cold. I paused outside Andrew’s bedroom, breathing in the faint scent of his deodorant and shampoo.

His closet door was cracked open just an inch — as if someone had checked something and left it that way.

**

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“I love you, bud.”

Inside, everything seemed normal: shirts on hangers, a pile of soccer gear, the usual mess of a teenage boy.

I ran my hand over the clothes. My phone buzzed with another text from Brendon. I ignored it and kept searching.

The hospital still hadn’t called, and in my head, I kept hearing the doctor’s voice: “unlikely,” that word closing around him. If I was going to find the truth, it had to be before Brendon came home.

**

On the highest shelf, behind a stack of old comics, I found a blue shoebox. I took it down, sitting on Andrew’s bed.

“Okay, Andrew,” I whispered. “What did you want me to see, son?”

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I ran my hand over the clothes.

The lid came off easily. On top was the appointment from the cardiology clinic, scheduled for next week. Underneath, a printout from the patient portal.

I read it aloud, and my stomach dropped. “Appointment canceled by parent — Brendon.”

Not missed. Not delayed. Canceled — as if Andrew’s fear was an inconvenience.

A sticky note in Andrew’s handwriting was tucked beside it.

“Dad said I don’t need it. Mom is going to freak out,” I read.

“Appointment canceled by parent.”

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My phone buzzed again. This time, I answered.

“Why did you leave the hospital?” he asked.

“I needed to get some things, Brendon. And I needed to shower.”

“You’re not in his room, are you, Liv?” he asked.

“Why would that matter?”

There was a long silence.

“But I did find Andrew’s appointment card. Brendon, why did you cancel it?” I asked.

My phone buzzed again.

“I didn’t think he needed it. He was fine. You always overreact. My insurance doesn’t cover it anymore. I would have had to pay cash.”

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