What Her Teddy Bear Recorded After Sofia Died Shattered Her Father-yumihong

The hospital room smelled like sanitizer, old coffee, and plastic tubing.

Michael Morales had learned that smell the way some fathers learn the smell of grass after soccer practice or popcorn at a Saturday movie.

For him, fatherhood had become white sheets, nurse call buttons, medication schedules, and the sound of machines breathing beside his daughter.

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Sofia was seven years old.

She lay in the bed with Pancho under one arm, a brown teddy bear with one patched ear and a faded red ribbon that had gone through more wash cycles than Michael could count.

Her fingers were curled around its middle like she was afraid someone might take it.

Michael sat beside her with both hands wrapped around her smaller one, trying not to notice how little strength was left in her grip.

“Dad,” she whispered, “if I don’t wake up tomorrow, listen to Pancho.”

He leaned closer because he wanted to misunderstand her.

A parent can hear the truth and still try to bargain with the air around it.

“Don’t talk like that, sweetheart,” he said. “You’re coming home. We still have taco night. You made me promise.”

Sofia’s eyes stayed fixed on his.

They were tired, but not empty.

That was what frightened him most.

She looked like a child carrying something too heavy for a child to carry.

“He knows what they did to me,” she said.

Michael felt something cold open beneath his ribs.

“Who?”

Sofia did not answer right away.

Her lips moved once without sound, and then she swallowed as if every word hurt.

“Only you, Dad. Don’t tell anyone.”

He tried to smile for her.

He had done that so often over the past year that his face knew the shape even when his heart could not support it.

“Okay,” he said. “I promise.”

She closed her eyes with Pancho still pressed to her chest.

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