He Was 500 Miles Away When His Daughter Was Left Bleeding Outside-heyily

The first thing James remembered was the smell of the hotel lobby.

Lemon cleaner, burnt coffee, and the faint cold smell of rain coming through the automatic doors every time someone walked in from the Minneapolis night.

A couple near the elevators was laughing at something on a phone.

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A woman in heels dragged a blue suitcase across the marble floor.

The whole place was ordinary in the cruel way ordinary places become when your life is breaking in the middle of them.

James had been in Minneapolis for business, five hundred miles from his house outside Chicago, when Carolyn Sherwood called him after midnight.

Carolyn lived next door.

She was sixty-four, retired from the public school library, and known on the block for zucchini bread, porch mums, and the kind of quiet watchfulness that made people stand up a little straighter when they left trash cans out too long.

She was not dramatic.

She was not nosy in the ugly way.

She was the neighbor who noticed when a garage door stayed open during a storm, or when a package sat too long on a porch, or when a child was outside at an hour no child should be outside.

So when James saw her name on his phone, he stepped away from the hotel front desk and answered.

“James,” she whispered, “I don’t know what to do.”

The sound of her voice changed the air around him.

“What happened?”

“It’s Sarah,” Carolyn said. “She’s sitting in your driveway.”

For a second, James thought he had heard wrong.

His daughter was eight years old.

At midnight, Sarah should have been asleep with one sock kicked off under the blanket, her stuffed rabbit wedged beside her pillow, and a library book open facedown on the nightstand because she always swore she was still reading.

“What do you mean she’s sitting in the driveway?”

“She’s alone,” Carolyn said. “There is blood on her face, James. On her forehead. On her arm. On her pajamas. I tried talking to her, but she just stared at me. I knocked on your door. Nobody answered. I called Melissa. She isn’t answering.”

James looked through the hotel glass at the wet street outside.

The city lights blurred in the rain.

For one frozen second, he could not make the words line up with the life he knew.

Sarah.

Driveway.

Blood.

Alone.

“Stay with her,” he said. “Please. Stay right there. I’m calling Melissa.”

He called his wife before he even reached the parking garage.

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