“She’s stabilized,” he said, rubbing the bridge of his nose. “We pushed IV fluids and administered antipyretics to break the fever. When she arrived, her core temperature was 104.2°F. She was severely dehydrated. Another hour or two in that hot house, and we would have been looking at permanent neurological damage, or worse.”
He paused, looking at me with a hard, uncompromising stare. “Where are her parents? The paperwork says you’re her grandfather. I have a legal obligation to report a child brought in under these circumstances with no primary guardian.”
“Report them,” I said, my voice vibrating with a lethal, icy calm. “Report them for felony endangerment. Because her parents are currently on a luxury cruise in the Caribbean.”
Dr. Aris’s jaw tightened. “I’ll have the social worker draft the documentation immediately.”
I walked into Maya’s recovery room. She looked so incredibly small in the hospital bed, connected to a labyrinth of tubes and monitors. When she heard my footsteps, she turned her head. The milky haze was gone from her eyes, replaced by a profound, heartbreaking exhaustion.
She reached out a tiny hand. I took it, sitting on the edge of the mattress.
“Did Mama call?” she whispered, her voice hoarse. “Is she mad that I’m at the doctor? It costs a lot of money.”
I leaned down, pressing my forehead against hers. “She hasn’t called, Maya. And she has no right to be mad. You did nothing wrong. You are safe now.”
While she slept, the grandfather retreated, and the judge took over. I pulled out my phone and called Marcus, a former colleague and the sharpest, most ruthless family lawyer in Atlanta. I sent him photos of the note, the thermometer, and the ER intake forms.
Then, I did a deep dive into Catherine’s public Instagram account. There it was. Posted just twelve hours ago. A photograph of Julian, Catherine, and Leo on the teak deck of the Gilded Seas, holding tropical drinks.
The caption read: “Just the three of us for a distraction-free week. Premium concierge level is worth every penny! Sometimes you just have to prioritize the peace.”
I forwarded the screenshot to Marcus. “File the emergency custody petition by sunrise,” I instructed. “I want full temporary placement. And I don’t want them to know until they step foot on dry land.”