At The Hospital, My Daughter Begged Me To Keep Her Stepmom Out-Tep

The phone rang at 6:11 in the morning, before the sun had cleared the roofs on our street.

The world outside my windshield was still blue-black and damp, with porch lights glowing over quiet mailboxes and the faint scrape of a neighbor’s trash bin rolling somewhere down the block.

I was sitting in the driveway with the heater running, a work folder on the passenger seat, my phone balanced on my knee, and a day of meetings already lined up in my head.

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I remember the smell of coffee more than anything.

Not fresh coffee, exactly.

Burnt coffee.

The kind left sitting too long, bitter and sharp, because Vanessa had started a pot in the kitchen and walked away from it without pouring a cup for me.

That small thing would have annoyed me on any other morning.

On that morning, it became part of the last ordinary minute of my life.

When my phone lit up, I expected my office.

A client.

A manager who wanted numbers before breakfast.

Somebody else’s emergency dressed up as business.

Then I read the name on the screen.

Ridgeview Children’s Hospital.

My body reacted before my mind did.

My hand went stiff around the phone, and for one strange second, I could hear the heater, the engine, my own breath, and nothing else.

“Mr. Callahan?” a woman asked when I answered.

“Yes,” I said. “This is Mark.”

Her voice was gentle, but it carried a weight that made my stomach drop.

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