About This Book
A woman working in a wartime hospital agrees to care for a feverish Southern patient and his attendant, a wounded Black man labeled contraband; she organizes ward tasks, reflects on racial prejudice and loyalty, notices the attendant's dignified bearing despite facial wounds and recent freedom, and balances compassion, practicality, and lightheartedness amid suffering. The narrative observes hospital routines, the emotional labor of caregiving, and the attendant's internal struggle between pain, memory, and the promise of liberty, while the caregiver contends with colleagues' fears and her own abolitionist convictions.
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