When Her Daughter Whispered Sorry, A Small Town Father Was Exposed-hothiyenvy_5

The call came while I was stitching up a border collie’s shoulder under the hard white lights of my clinic.

The room smelled like antiseptic, wet fur, and burned coffee.

Outside, the Nebraska wind pushed against the back door hard enough to make the frame rattle.

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My hands were steady.

They had always been steady.

That was one of the first things the Army taught me and one of the last things it left me with.

A steady hand could close a wound.

A steady hand could hold a life together long enough for help to arrive.

A steady hand could fool people into thinking you were not afraid.

I had been home for years by then, long enough for people in town to stop calling me Captain Hawthorne and start calling me Doc Tori.

I ran the small veterinary clinic off the county road, the one with the chipped blue door, the paper coffee cups stacked beside the sink, and the old pickup trucks in the parking lot before sunrise.

Farmers brought me dogs torn by barbed wire.

Kids brought me turtles in shoeboxes.

Elderly women brought me cats wrapped in towels and watched my face like I was the last honest weather report in the county.

I knew emergencies.

I knew how quickly a normal afternoon could split open.

Still, when my phone lit up with the County General number, my first thought was that some client had mixed up the clinic and hospital lines.

Then I saw the second ring.

Then the third.

Something in my chest went quiet.

“This is Victoria Hawthorne,” I said.

The woman on the other end lowered her voice.

That was how I knew.

“Mrs. Hawthorne, you need to come to the emergency room immediately. It’s your daughter.”

Meadow.

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