Another pause. “Well, obviously,” she said. “I’m not leaving the car unlocked with our stuff in it.”
I stared at the wall across from Lucy’s bed. The paint was that hospital beige meant to be calming, but it suddenly looked like the inside of a coffin.
“How long has she been there?” I asked.
“I don’t know,” Amanda said, impatient now. “We’re busy. The other kids are having a great time.”
Then she laughed— not cruelly, exactly, but carelessly. Like someone laughing at an inconvenience.
“We had such a great time without the drama,” she said. “Honestly, it was kind of nice.”
That was when I said, very clearly, “Lucy is in the hospital.”
Silence.
“What?” Amanda said, her voice flattening.
“She’s in the hospital,” I repeated. “Police called me. I’m here with her.”
“That’s not possible,” Amanda said immediately, the way people deny reality when it threatens them. “We parked in the shade. The window was open. She was fine.”
“She was alone,” I said. “A stranger had to call for help.”
A different silence now. Heavier.
“She’s— she’s fine, though, right?” Amanda asked, and there it was— not concern, not horror, but calculation. “I mean, she’s not actually hurt.”
I closed my eyes. “Define fine,” I said.
“She’s alive,” I said, because I needed to say it aloud.
Amanda exhaled, audible through the phone. And then— like flipping a switch— her fear evaporated and was replaced with irritation.
“So nothing really happened,” she said quickly. “See? You always do this. You always blow things out of proportion.”
“She was locked in a car for hours,” I said, my voice low.
“But she’s okay,” Amanda insisted. “You said it yourself.”
The nurse in the room glanced over, her eyes narrowing slightly, as if she could sense the shape of the conversation.
Amanda’s voice hardened. “We didn’t do anything wrong,” she said. “You’re turning this into a crisis for no reason.”
I ended the call before I could say something that would shatter whatever fragile control I still had.
For a moment I just sat there, phone in my lap, listening to the distant beep of a monitor down the hall. It sounded like proof. Like time continuing whether anyone deserved it or not.
Lucy looked up at me from the bed, watching my face with that careful, searching gaze kids get when they sense the adults are lying with their expressions.
“Are we going home?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said, forcing steadiness. “Very soon.”