My chest contracted so violently I thought my ribs would snap. The stories children tell themselves to rationalize their own abuse would break your faith in humanity if you let them. She genuinely believed her illness was a moral failure that justified her abandonment.
I didn’t bother packing a bag. I ran to the adjacent bathroom, soaked a hand towel in cold water, and wrapped it around her burning neck. I scooped her up. She weighed practically nothing, a fragile collection of bones and unimaginable grief.
I carried her down the stairs, kicking the front door shut behind me. The neighbor’s curtain twitched across the street. Someone was watching, a silent suburban spectator who had likely been told not to intervene. I didn’t care. My only objective was keeping the child in my arms tethered to the living.
I laid her gently in the backseat of my sedan, but as I buckled the seatbelt, Maya’s body suddenly went rigid. Her jaw locked, her back arched unnaturally, and her eyes rolled completely white. She was having a febrile seizure, right there in the dark driveway, and the nearest hospital was still twelve agonizing miles away.