May 12 – The Hospital

A Piedmont Lantern Story

Sheriff Reeves did not announce the news at the diner.

He let it move properly.

First, he called Vernon’s next of kin.

Sawyer Kate answered in New Orleans with the kind of bright politeness young people use when they expect ordinary conversation.

By the time the sheriff finished speaking, her voice had lost that brightness.

“He’s alive?” she asked.

“Yes, ma’am,” the sheriff replied. “Alive. Recovering.”

“And he didn’t call?” she whispered.

The sheriff paused.

“He was admitted without identification. Severe head trauma. Disoriented. They’re telling me his memory has been… unreliable.”

Silence stretched across the line.

“I’m coming,” she said at last.

By midmorning, the word alive had reached the diner.

Pearl set her coffee pot down carefully when Sheriff Reeves told them.

“Alive,” she repeated.

“Alive,” he confirmed.

Beulah Mae pressed a hand to her chest.

“Well,” she said. “Praise the Lord.”

Earl nodded, though his relief carried a thread of something else.

“And he’s been where?” Earl asked.

“St. Vincent’s,” the sheriff replied. “Stabilized first. Then rehab.”

Mrs. Hollis blinked. “Rehab?”

“He had head trauma,” the sheriff said evenly. “They’re working on mobility. Memory.”

That last word changed the room.

Memory.

The town had spent two weeks stitching together its own version of events.

Now the man himself might not remember any of it.

Pearl leaned against the counter.

“Does he know who he is?” she asked quietly.

“Sometimes,” the sheriff replied. “Sometimes not.”

In Birmingham, Vernon Tate sat upright in a narrow bed near a window that looked onto a parking structure.

The sky was pale.

He had been told his name more times than he could count.

Vernon.

Vernon Tate.

They said it gently.

They said it often.

Some days it fit.

Some days it felt like a coat borrowed from someone else.

Sister Bernadette stood beside him, hands folded loosely.

“You’re doing better this week,” she said softly.

He nodded, though he was not entirely certain what better meant.

He remembered rain.

He remembered steering wheel vibration.

He remembered a curve.

After that, there was only brightness and sound and a voice he did not recognize telling him to stay awake.

“Babbling Brook,” he said suddenly.

Sister Bernadette smiled.

“Yes,” she replied. “That’s the road where your house is.”

He closed his eyes.

“I don’t drive the interstate,” he murmured.

“No,” she said gently. “You don’t.”

Back in Piedmont, the news began dividing itself.

Relief first.

He lived.

He survived.

The car had not been his grave.

Then came the quieter reckoning.

He had been alone.

For days.

In rain.

Hurt.

Walking.

Oliver Kinzalow received the news in his office.

Alive.

He exhaled in a way he had not allowed himself to until that moment.

Alive meant no death to explain.

Alive meant no accusation that could not be deflected by circumstance.

But head trauma.

Memory unreliable.

That complicated things.

Because a man who remembers poorly may not remember pressure clearly either.

And that, Oliver understood, could cut two ways.

At the diner, Beulah Mae leaned forward.

“When’s he comin’ home?” she asked.

“Not yet,” the sheriff replied. “Rehab could take time.”

“How long?” Pearl asked.

“That depends on what comes back,” the sheriff said.

He did not say what might not.

Sawyer Kate arrived in Piedmont that evening before driving straight on to Birmingham.

She stopped only long enough to stand in the yard of the Tate house.

The porch light was still dark.

She looked at it for a long moment.

“Since when?” she whispered, though she had only just arrived.

In Birmingham, Vernon dozed lightly while machines hummed soft and steady.

Sister Bernadette stepped into the hallway where Sister Paul waited.

“He’s improving,” Bernadette said, though her brow carried worry.

“Do you believe he’ll recover fully?” Sister Paul asked.

Bernadette hesitated.

“I’m not certain,” she said honestly. “Head injuries can be patient or cruel. Sometimes both.”

Back in Piedmont, the bypass investors held a quiet conference call.

Development could proceed, they reasoned. The parcel would not move without its owner, but plans could adjust.

“Five-year leasing structure?” one voice suggested.

“Unlikely,” another replied. “He’s been resistant.”

Resistant.

The word felt smaller now.

Because a man who has crawled out of a gully in the rain is not merely resistant.

He is something else.

That night, porch lights glowed across Piedmont.

The Tate house remained dark.

But now the darkness was not absence.

It was waiting.

And waiting, as every small town knows, can be more uncomfortable than grief.

Vernon Tate was alive.

He was remembering.

Slowly.

And when memory returns, so do questions.

Piedmont would have to answer them.

One way or another.

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