The car felt too quiet, too still, the kind of silence that makes every second louder, every breath heavier, he kept one hand on the wheel, the other holding her close, her small body resting against him, lighter than it should be, weaker than he was ready to accept
“Breathe, little one… can you hear me?” he said softly, trying to keep his voice steady, trying not to let the fear break through
Her name was Lily, five years old, stubborn, full of life, the kind of child who filled every room with noise and questions, the kind of child who never sat still, never quiet, always laughing, always pulling at his sleeve to show him something new
And now… silence
Hours earlier, everything had been normal, breakfast on the table, cartoons playing in the background, her asking the same questions she always asked, “Are you coming home early today?” “Will we go to the park?” simple things, small things, things he sometimes rushed past because work was always waiting
He had always told himself he’d make more time
Later
There’s always later
Until there isn’t
When she collapsed, it didn’t make sense, one second she was talking, the next she wasn’t, her body going still in a way no parent is ever prepared for, panic replacing thought, instinct taking over
Now he was driving faster than he ever had, not reckless, just desperate, every red light feeling like a wall, every second stretching too long
“Stay with me… please stay with me…”
Her head shifted slightly against him
Barely
But enough
“Dad…?” she whispered
The word hit him harder than anything else, because in that moment, it wasn’t just a word, it was a thread, something fragile but still there
“I’m here, I’m right here,” he said quickly, his voice breaking now, no control left
The hospital came into view
Too far
Too slow
Never close enough
He pulled in, door opening before the car fully stopped, calling for help, voices finally replacing silence, hands reaching, taking her carefully, rushing her inside
And then… waiting
The longest kind
Minutes feeling like hours
Every thought louder than the last
Until finally, a doctor stepped out
Calm
Controlled
But different
“She’s going to be okay,” he said
Just like that
Simple
But everything
The tension broke all at once, his body finally catching up to what had happened, relief hitting harder than fear ever did
Later, sitting beside her bed, watching her sleep, steady this time, real this time, he understood something he hadn’t fully faced before
There isn’t always more time
There’s just the time you choose to be there