His mother had stepped out to buy dinner. The doctor was in surgery. And Nandan, alone in his hospital bed, had just pressed the emergency button that routed through his own phone—the one Arjun had locked down so carefully.
Arjun clutched the phone. The feature that was meant to bar the world had barred the only voice that mattered.
He fumbled with the settings, fingers shaking, disabling the call barring feature. But it was too late. By the time he reached the room, the monitors were flatlining. call barring feature
It wasn’t out of cruelty. His father, Nandan, had entered the early stages of dementia, and the spam calls had become a torment—fraudsters promising lottery winnings, fake banks demanding OTPs, and telemarketers selling immortality in a bottle. Each call left Nandan confused, sometimes in tears. So Arjun barred all incoming numbers except his own, his mother’s, and the family doctor’s. Peace returned.
But tonight, Arjun stood in a fluorescent-lit hospital corridor, phone pressed to his ear, listening to a prerecorded voice: “The number you are calling has call barring active. Please try again later.” His mother had stepped out to buy dinner
Later, the nurse handed him Nandan’s phone. On the screen, still glowing, was a half-typed text message, autocorrect mangling the words: “son, i am scared. please unblock me.”
Arjun stared at his phone screen. Three missed calls. All from the barred number. All silenced by the very wall he had built to protect his father. Arjun clutched the phone
The nurse ran past him. “Your father’s oxygen levels dropped. He tried to call you.”