The orderly could hear screaming from Room No 7 every night when an unknown man came to see the elderly patient

The orderly worked the late shift on the geriatric wing, a place that usually settled into a fragile quiet once the evening medications were distributed and the lights were dimmed. Wheelchairs stopped moving. Televisions went dark. The air took on that familiar blend of disinfectant and old linen. It was the calm she depended on to get through twelve-hour shifts.

Then there were the screams.

They didn’t echo down the hall. They didn’t carry the sharp pitch of sudden pain. They were muted, strangled, as if someone were trying not to be heard. Each time, they came from the same place: Room No. 7.

The first night, she assumed it was confusion. Elderly patients sometimes cried out when nightmares tangled with memory. She paused with her mop bucket outside the

The second night, it happened again.

And the third.

By the fourth night, she knew something was wrong.
The patient in Room No. 7 was an eighty-two-year-old woman recovering from a fractured hip. She was polite to the point of apology, thanking staff for every

water, every adjustment of her blanket. She never raised her voice. She never complained. Yet lately, the orderly noticed changes that didn’t fit the chart.Crystal glassware

The woman startled when doors opened. Her hands trembled when anyone touched her wrist. Her eyes avoided faces, fixing instead on the floor or the edge of the bed. Once, when the orderly helped her wash up, she spotted bruising along the inside of the woman’s arm—finger-shaped, fresh, impossible to ignore.

When asked, the patient whispered the same sentence she always did.

“I’m fine. Please don’t make trouble.”

That was when the orderly began paying attention to the visitor.

He arrived every evening just before visiting hours ended. He wore pressed coats and expensive shoes, his hair neatly combed, his voice calm and courteous. He introduced himself as a relative. No one questioned him. Family visits were encouraged, after all.

But the timing never changed. And after he left, the screams followed.

The orderly mentioned it to a senior nurse. She was told to mind her duties. A doctor shrugged and said elderly patients often became emotional at night. Another coworker warned her quietly, “Don’t get involved. Families are complicated.”

Still, the screaming continued.

One night, as she passed the door, she heard raised voices. Not crying this time. Whispered anger. Then a sharp, choked sound—cut off too quickly.

The orderly went home shaking. She didn’t sleep. By morning, fear had turned into something harder and more dangerous: resolve.

If no one would look, she would.

The next evening, she volunteered to clean Room No. 7 early. The patient was resting, eyes closed, breathing shallow. The orderly moved quietly, heart pounding, then slipped down to the floor and crawled beneath the bed.

Dust coated her sleeves. The metal frame creaked softly above her head. She lay flat, barely breathing, listening to her own pulse thunder in her ears.

Footsteps approached.

The door opened.

She recognized the man immediately by his shoes. Polished leather. Expensive soles.

At first, his voice was gentle. Almost kind. He asked how the patient was feeling. He told her she needed to be reasonable. Papers rustled. He spoke of property, of “what made sense at her age,” of signatures that would “make everything easier.”

The patient cried quietly, refusing.

That was when his tone changed.

From beneath the bed, the orderly heard threats delivered in a voice so calm it was terrifying. He spoke about medication. About how easily doctors could be persuaded that confusion was worsening. About how cooperation would make things go smoothly, and resistance would only make her sicker.

The woman begged him to stop.

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