Chapter 11
Chapter 11
Though our demanding work left little time for each other. Most of our encounters occurred in conflict zones–he’d be rushing to treat the wounded while I fought to save lives in the operating room. Often, a brief touch as we passed was all we could share.
The unreliable network coverage didn’t help. Days would pass without contact, then suddenly my phone would buzz incessantly with an avalanche of messages. They arrived jumbled and chaotic, as if they too had navigated through gunfire and devastation, yet each carried the weight of longing and unwavering devotion.
The situation in East Meridian Province deteriorated rapidly.
Our first serious argument erupted when a village near Meridia came under attack. We arrived while the militants were still active, with security forces engaged in ongoing firefights.
We were rushing back to evacuate when Joseph suddenly leaped from the ambulance. At the battlefield’s edge lay a fallen villager. Joseph hoisted the man onto his back and carried him to safety, his own body lacerated by shrapnel.
Terror and fury coursed through me. “Are you trying to get yourself killed?”
He stood firm. “I’m a doctor! I couldn’t leave him there! His leg injury was survivable–if I hadn’t acted, he would have died for certain!”
I knew he was right. I knew it was his duty. But when he returned drenched in blood–so much I couldn’t distinguish his from the victim’s–my composure shattered.
After confirming with trembling hands that his wounds were superficial, I broke down, clinging to him as I sobbed.
“Joseph! I can’t lose anyone else! If something happened to you, what would I do?”
He held me in silence before wrapping his arms around me, his voice raw. “I’m sorry… I promise to be more careful. No more unnecessary risks. No more making you worry.”
Still crying, I pressed my face against his chest. “You have to promise!”
“Let’s make it official,” he said, extending his pinky. “Pinky swear–whoever breaks it turns into a puppy!”
I couldn’t help but laugh through my tears. “If you really turned into a puppy, how would I introduce
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Backup Girl No More: Adios To My V Card and My First Love
23.4%
Chapter 11
you to my mother?”
“Your puppy boyfriend?” he teased with a grin.
I hurled a pillow at him in exasperation. He played dead, lying motionless until I frantically pulled the pillow away to find his face unmarked, wearing that sly smile. His expression seemed to say: See? I’m not so easy to break.
I glared until my vision blurred with fresh tears. In that moment, I realized how precious each day with Joseph truly was.
As the conflict intensified, Ebola began its merciless sweep through this already ravaged land. By spring, Joseph’s schedule grew even more demanding. With medical staff severely depleted, he shuttled between refugee camps and the Ebola treatment center.
When armed groups launched surprise attacks on treatment centers across several cities, many doctors were forced to evacuate. But Joseph refused to leave. While Meridia remained relatively stable, nearly a hundred patients lay in the center. Abandoning them meant leaving them to die in
their beds.
Joseph and four other doctors chose to stay and adapt as events unfolded. But the situation deteriorated rapidly. Armed groups seized the outskirts of Meridia, cutting off all escape routes. We
were trapped.
Amid this tension, Joseph suddenly messaged me to come to the treatment center. He offered no explanation, but dread settled in my stomach.
After donning protective gear, we entered the medical waste disposal area. In a hastily cleared room, I found a group of Huronai children–more than ten of them. They had fled from the
mountains, the eldest no more than twelve.
Their clothes hung in tatters, their bodies riddled with infected wounds. I could hardly believe my
eyes.
The armed groups controlling the outskirts were Tusari, locked in a generations–old blood feud with the Huronais. If these children were discovered, not only would they face certain death, but the
entire treatment center could be destroyed.
Overwhelmed, I shouted at Joseph: “Have you lost your mind? What about the principles of Doctors
Without Borders?”
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