“No,” I said carefully. “They made a very bad choice. That’s not your fault.”
She nodded like she understood, but her eyes stayed distant.
By nightfall, the cruise ship had been contacted. Security escorted Daniel and Rachel to the ship’s medical office, then to a private holding room. Their vacation had ended somewhere between the Caribbean and a locked door they didn’t expect.
Detective Harris called me again.
“They’re being flown back tomorrow,” he said. “This is going to get complicated.”
“Good,” I replied.
Because I wasn’t done yet.
Not even close.
The call came at 2:03 a.m.
My phone lit up the dark bedroom, buzzing against the nightstand like it was afraid of being ignored. Unknown number. I nearly let it ring—but something in my chest tightened before my hand even reached for it.
“Is this… Margaret Ellis?” a young voice asked, unsteady and hurried.
“Yes.”
“This is Nurse Caldwell at Riverside County ER. We have an 8-year-old girl, Olivia Carter. She says you’re her grandmother.”
My breath caught. Olivia. My granddaughter. Adopted by my son, Daniel, when she was three.
“What happened?” I asked.
“She has a 104-degree fever. Severe dehydration. We believe treatment was delayed. She was brought in by EMS from a hotel shuttle stop.”
A hotel.
My thoughts immediately went to Daniel.
He had left three days earlier with his wife, Rachel, and their biological son, Ethan—on a luxury cruise departing from Miami. I remembered the pictures Rachel had posted: champagne flutes, ocean views, coordinated cruise outfits.
Not one mention of Olivia.
I was already grabbing my keys before the nurse finished.
“I’m coming,” I said.
The flight I booked wasn’t for hours, but I couldn’t sit still. One thought kept repeating: Who leaves a sick child like that? Who leaves any child?
By the time I landed in Florida, I had already called three times. Daniel didn’t answer. Rachel didn’t answer. Straight to voicemail, like my concern was nothing but an inconvenience.
At the hospital, Olivia looked smaller than I remembered. Her skin was pale, her lips cracked, her small hand wrapped in an IV line. The moment she saw me, her eyes filled with tears.
“Grandma… I tried to tell them I was sick,” she whispered. “They said I was ruining the trip.”
Something inside me broke—cleanly and without a sound.
A doctor approached, flipping through her chart. “She’s stable now, but she arrived dangerously late. A few more hours…”
He didn’t finish.
I nodded, but I wasn’t really hearing him anymore. My gaze drifted to the officer standing near the door—hospital protocol had already escalated the situation.
“Do we know who left her there?” I asked.
He checked his notes. “A hotel shuttle driver found her alone near the luggage pickup area. No adult present. We’re tracking the last known location of her parents.”
Parents.
I looked down at Olivia, then back at him.
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