
A Stranger Who Never Missed 3 p.m.
For six months, a bearded biker named Mike showed up at exactly 3 p.m. to sit with my comatose 17-year-old daughter, Hannah. He read fantasy novels, held her hand, and left at 4 on the dot. Nurses greeted him like family, while I silently wondered why a stranger had earned a place beside my child. I lived in that hospital room, surviving on vending machines and hope, yet I didn’t know who he was—or why he came every day without fail.
One afternoon, I finally followed him. That’s when he told me the truth: he was the drunk driver who hit Hannah’s car. He had served his time, gotten sober, and returned every day to face what he had done. “It doesn’t fix anything,” he said, “but I won’t hide.” I asked him to leave, then later changed my mind. At three o’clock the next day, he came back and kept reading.
Weeks later, Hannah squeezed my hand. Then she woke up. She didn’t forgive him—but she didn’t want him gone either. Today, she’s walking again, slowly, painfully, bravely. And every year at 3 p.m., we sit together, not to forget—but to keep going.