A nurse hovered by the door, giving us a minute and not giving us a minute at the same time.
When Lucy’s sobs finally slowed into hiccups, I leaned back just enough to see her face. Her lashes were wet. Her lower lip trembled. There were faint red marks on her forehead where she’d pressed against something— glass, maybe. She looked exhausted, but her eyes kept scanning me like she needed to be sure I wasn’t going to vanish.
“Are you hurt?” I asked, hands moving over her arms, her shoulders, her hair.
She shook her head quickly. “I was thirsty,” she whispered. “And it was hot.”
I swallowed hard. “I know.”
Her grip tightened again. “I waited,” she said, voice tiny. “I thought they were coming back.”
The nurse stepped forward gently. “Ms. Walker,” she said, “I’m going to explain what we know.”
“Okay,” I said too fast. My voice sounded like it belonged to someone else.
The nurse kept her tone precise, calm— the tone of someone who has delivered information like this before and has learned that facts are safer than emotion.
“Lucy was found in a parked car in a public lot,” she said. “A passerby noticed a child inside, knocking on the window and crying. They contacted security, who called 911.”
Lucy’s fingers curled into the fabric of my sleeve at the word passerby, as if imagining the stranger who had saved her. I felt a strange, sudden gratitude toward someone I would never meet.
“Emergency services arrived,” the nurse continued, “and they got her out. She was conscious, very upset, and overheated. EMS brought her here for evaluation.”
I stared at the nurse. “How long was she in the car?” I asked.
The nurse hesitated, then shook her head. “That’s still being confirmed by police. Based on the information we have so far, it wasn’t a short period.”
Not short. My chest tightened until it felt like my ribs were closing in.
“She kept asking where you were,” the nurse added quietly. “She was scared.”
I nodded because my body still knew how to nod even though my mind was splintering.
“Physically, she’s doing well,” the nurse said. “We’re monitoring her temperature and hydration. But because of her age and how she was found— we had to report it. That’s standard.”
Standard. That word again. Like this could ever be standard. Like a six-year-old alone in a sealed metal box during a heatwave could be routine.