One Clear Moment
As the paramedics helped Evelyn toward the ambulance, she turned back toward me.
For a single moment, something in her eyes seemed to clear.
Like fog lifting just long enough to see the road.
She looked directly at me.
“Don’t leave him,” she said softly.
“Not again.”
Then the moment passed.
And she was gone with the ambulance.
The Knock the Next Morning
My shift ended around eight that morning.
I went home, took a quick shower, and collapsed onto my couch.
I figured the night was over.
Just another call.
Just another story.
But around 10:17 a.m., someone knocked on my door.
Hard.
When I opened it, Evelyn’s daughter was standing there.
Her eyes were red and swollen like she hadn’t slept at all.
In her hands, she held a small shoebox.
“Officer,” she said quietly.
“My mom asked me to find you.”
I frowned.
“What for?”
She stepped inside and placed the shoebox on my kitchen table.
Then she lifted the lid.
Inside were old documents—yellowed papers and sealed envelopes.
“My mom had a son before me,” she said slowly.
“I never knew much about him. No one talked about it.”
She slid one paper toward me.
A hospital intake form.
Date: 1988.
Mother: Evelyn B.
Male infant.
First name:
Caleb.
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