The streets of downtown Boston pulsed with the Monday morning rush—heels clacking against pavement, car horns blaring, and voices echoing against the tall glass buildings. Emma Blake weaved through the crowd, clutching her worn leather folder tight against her chest. Inside were her resume, references, and portfolio—weeks of preparation for one interview. Weston & Co., a mid-size marketing firm, had agreed to see her at 10:00 a.m. sharp.
This was it. Her chance to finally leave behind late-night shifts waiting tables and move toward the career she dreamed of. Emma checked her watch: 9:45. She had fifteen minutes left.
But then she saw the commotion. A small circle of people had formed on the sidewalk just ahead. Curious, she slowed her pace—then froze.
A man lay collapsed on the concrete, his face ghostly pale, his chest frighteningly still. He looked to be in his fifties, dressed in a tailored suit that screamed of success. Yet none of that mattered—he wasn’t breathing.
Emma’s folder slipped from her hands. She pushed through the crowd and dropped to her knees beside him. “Sir? Can you hear me?” Her voice trembled, but her training from a CPR class two summers ago kicked in. No response. No pulse.
“Someone call 911!” she shouted, already positioning her hands on his chest.
The world narrowed to the rhythm of compressions—one, two, three—her arms straining, sweat beading on her forehead. The man’s lips began to turn bluish, and panic clawed at her chest, but she kept going. Around her, bystanders just watched, some filming on their phones, others whispering.
Finally, faint sirens cut through the city noise. Paramedics rushed in, sliding her aside to take over. One of them looked at her, breathless but sincere. “You may have just saved this man’s life.”
Emma stumbled back, chest heaving. Relief surged, quickly replaced by dread. She grabbed her folder, flipping it open with shaking hands—papers scattered across the sidewalk. Her phone screen lit up: 10:07.
She was already late.
The interview—the one chance she had been working toward for months—was gone.
Emma stood frozen on the busy street, watching the ambulance doors close. The man she’d saved was whisked away, and the crowd dispersed, leaving her alone with her missed opportunity. She whispered to herself, voice breaking:
“What did I just do?”…