The fluorescent lights of St. Catherine’s trauma center burned into my eyes as I sat rigid in a plastic waiting room chair, my hands still stained with Jake’s blood. Forty-five minutes ago, I’d been the one holding my ten-year-old son’s broken body on a ravine embankment, whispering promises I wasn’t sure I could keep while the LifeFlight helicopter descended through mountain fog.
Now surgeons were fighting to save him somewhere beyond those double doors, and all I could do was wait. My phone vibrated. Through the haze of shock, I pulled it from my pocket.
A text from my mother-in-law, Patrice. Your wife’s birthday dinner is tomorrow. Don’t you dare miss it.
I stared at the message, reading it three times as if repetition would make the words rearrange themselves into something human. My son was in emergency surgery. Jake had fallen—or jumped, the park ranger wasn’t sure—nearly forty feet down Blackstone Ridge during what was supposed to be a simple father-son camping trip.
And Patrice was worried about a birthday dinner. My fingers trembled as I typed back: My son might not make it through the night. The reply came within seconds: Be there or you’re dead to us.
Something inside my chest went cold and hard. I blocked the number without responding, then powered off my phone entirely. In the reflection of the darkened screen, I barely recognized myself—a thirty-four-year-old structural engineer who’d spent eight years trying to make a broken marriage work.
Dr. Patricia Morrison emerged from surgery still in her scrubs, wearing the careful expression doctors use when news could go either way. “Mr.
Coon, your son made it through surgery. The next seventy-two hours are critical. Severe concussion, broken ribs, punctured lung, significant internal bleeding we’ve managed to control.
He’s unconscious but stable.”
My legs nearly gave out. “Can I see him?”
“Soon. But Mr.
Coon, I need to ask you something.” She hesitated, and I felt it like a shadow crossing light. “Some of Jake’s injuries—the pattern is unusual. The positioning of bruising on his upper arms, for instance.
Did anyone else have contact with Jake before the fall?”
My throat tightened. “What are you saying?”
“In cases like this, we’re required to ask questions.”
We’d been alone on the trail. Jake had been acting strange all weekend—jumpy, nervous, not himself.
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