“Boss, call from number two,” Raju said, voice low. “Old man says his PAN is blocked. Wants help transfer money to clear penalty. We can get the OTP.”

Aman breathed in the dust and the diesel and the faint smell of bleach from the ward. He had enough time to make one choice. Not the right one. Not the easy one. Just one that might keep them breathing a little longer.

Aman set his jaw. “Prep the scripts,” he told Raju. “But we move slow. No new accounts. Clean calls only.” He stood and reached for the hospital bill. The phone buzzed once more, then went silent. Outside, the train sighed through town, indifferent to promises and threats.

Aman closed his eyes. His mother’s hospital bill was still unopened on the kitchen table, the amount a jagged mouth that didn’t close. He could feel the crew’s hunger behind him—Raju’s eager fingers, Sania’s quiet look whenever he hesitated.

For the first time in months, the town felt smaller than the choices in front of him. Pay the extortionist with stolen money, and the cycle tightened. Refuse and risk the clinic stopping care. Walk away and leave his crew—and his sister—to whatever came next. He imagined himself in a different life: a legitimate job, a steady paycheck, the quiet dignity he’d seen in a cousin who’d moved to the city. That life required something he no longer had in abundance: time.

Half an hour later, the transfer bounced back: the target realized something was wrong and hung up. On the group chat, someone typed a laughing sticker, but the mood had thinned. Aman stared at the failed transfer and then at a message he hadn’t dared open: a wire confirmation from a private hospital two towns over, stamped with his mother’s name.