A Prison Doctor Found Her Mother’s Pendant While Treating an Inmate She Was Never Supposed to Meet-yumihong

The infirmary door opened behind Chloe, and Deputy Warden Harris stepped in with a man I had never seen before.

Harris always entered rooms like he owned the oxygen. Gray suit. Polished shoes. A clipboard tucked under one arm. He looked at the dropped medical chart, then at Chloe’s frozen face, then at the two halves of silver hanging between us.

“Is there a problem here?” he asked.

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Nobody answered.

The rain tapped harder against the narrow window. The fluorescent light above us flickered once, turning Chloe’s white coat the color of bone for half a second.

The man beside Harris wore a navy jacket with the Department of Corrections seal on the breast pocket. His eyes went straight to my necklace.

“Mrs. Evelyn Miller?” he said.

My fingers closed around the pendant.

Chloe turned slowly. “Why are you here?”

Harris gave her a tight smile. “Routine file review, Doctor. Finish the sutures. The inmate doesn’t need a family reunion.”

The word family hit the room and stayed there.

Chloe’s face changed.

Not loudly. Not dramatically.

Her shoulders straightened. Her gloved hand lowered to her side. The woman who had been careful with my wound suddenly looked like someone who had spent years learning how to stand in rooms where men expected obedience.

“What file?” she asked.

Harris looked at the officer by the wall. “Take Miller back to holding.”

The officer pushed off the wall, still chewing. His hand moved toward my elbow.

Chloe stepped between us.

“She has an untreated head wound and possible concussion,” she said. “Touch her, and I document medical interference.”

The officer stopped.

The man in the navy jacket glanced at Harris.

Harris’s smile thinned. “Doctor, you are here on a temporary prison rotation. Don’t confuse that with authority.”

Chloe reached down, picked up the clipboard, and held it against her chest. Her fingers were shaking now, but her voice stayed low.

“My authority is medical. Hers is legal custody. Yours is administrative.” She looked at the man beside him. “So which one of you came in here because of the adoption file?”

My breath caught.

Adoption file.

I had not heard those words spoken inside this building since 1996.

The navy-jacket man’s mouth tightened. Harris looked at him too fast.

That was when Chloe saw it.

The flicker. The exchanged glance. The hidden thing sitting between them like a locked drawer.

She reached for the small half-heart at her throat and turned it over. Her thumb rubbed the back where the old scratches crossed the silver.

“My adoptive parents told me my mother was dead,” she said.

The cot paper crackled under me.

My hand went flat against my chest.

Harris said, “Many adoption records from that period were incomplete.”

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