The first thing you notice is his face. Thinner, drawn, the familiar charm edged with something rawer: fear. Bill Clinton says he plans to be here “a lot longer,” but his eyes tell a different story. In a shaky voice, he thanks doctors, warns Americans to “listen to your bodies,” and hints at unfinished work he refuses to abandon. What they found in his blood, the infection that almost tipped into disaster, and the quiet admission that he is not invincible anymore all collide into one brutal, unspoken question: how much time does he rea… Continues…