The Court Records Arrived Before the Ambulance, and Her Mother Reached for the…

“Don’t close that door,” my father said.

Judith’s hand stayed on the knob.

Rain slid from the porch roof in silver ropes. My hospital bag was open on the concrete, tiny socks darkening in the water. One of my sandals had twisted sideways under my foot, and every breath pulled tight across my stomach like someone had tied a belt around my spine.

William held the leather envelope high enough for my mother to see the county seal pressed into the flap.

“Ambulance first,” he said into his phone. “Sheriff second.”

Judith’s face changed by inches. Not fear all at once. Smaller than that. Her mouth flattened. Her eyes moved from the envelope to the slashed tires, then to Christine’s hand still wrapped around my cracked phone.

Christine lowered the phone behind her thigh.

My father saw it.

“Put it on the porch,” he said.

“She dropped it,” Christine answered.

William didn’t raise his voice.

“Put my daughter’s phone on the porch.”

A siren wailed somewhere far off, thin at first, then growing teeth.

Another contraction folded me forward. My palm scraped across the driveway, and my father dropped to one knee beside me, his coat already soaked through at the shoulder where it covered my back.

“Maria, look at me,” he said. “Breathe with the rain. In. Out.”

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