She was barefoot at 2 AM, clutching a dying puppy like a heartbeat.
She was barefoot at 2 AM, clutching a dying puppy like a heartbeat.
“Can you fix him like you fixed the soldier’s chair?” she whispered.
Then, softer, “Mommy won’t wake up.”
Cold air pushed past my doorway and crawled up my spine. I dropped to one knee. The kid couldn’t be more than three—hair stuck to her cheeks, pajama pants soaked at the cuffs, lips the color of skim milk. The puppy in her arms wheezed in tiny, broken bursts, ribs like paint stirrers under wet fur.
“I’m Evan,” I said, keeping my voice low and steady, the way they taught us for bad nights. “What’s your name?”
“Maya. This is Scout.” She hugged the dog tighter. “He’s hurt.”
“I’m going to help both of you.” I reached for the wool throw on the back of my couch and wrapped it around her shoulders. With my other hand I was already dialing. “County 911, what’s your emergency?” a woman answered.
“Possible domestic assault,” I said, stepping aside so the heater could spill warm air into the doorway. “Child present. Adult female unconscious at an unknown address nearby. I’m a neighbor. I’m a veteran. I can render first aid. I’m with the child now.”
“Copy. We need an address.”
I looked at Maya. “Can you show me where you live, sweetheart?”
She nodded, jaw chattering. “Yellow flowers. Blue mailbox.”
The dispatcher kept me talking as I shoved my feet into boots and grabbed my first-aid kit from under the hall table. “Stay on the line,” she said. “Police and EMS en route. Do not engage any suspects.”
“Wouldn’t dream of it,” I said. I’ve seen what adrenaline does to judgment. These days I fix things with a phone call and a roll of gauze.
I scooped Maya up—light as a pillow—and she burrowed into the collar of my flannel like she’d been doing it her whole life. Scout gave a thin whine. I tucked the puppy under my coat against my chest so his tiny body could steal heat from mine.
Outside, the world was frost and quiet. My porch light cut a hard cone into the dark. I flicked it off, then on—habit from deployments, a signal: here, this way. “Okay, navigator,” I said. “Point me.”
She pressed a hand out from the blanket and pointed down the street. “That one. With the flowers.”
The front door was open. No lights. A breath of air moved the edge of a curtain like a hand that had changed its mind.
“Stay with me, Maya,” I said, carrying her and Scout inside. “I’m going to find Mommy.”
We found her in the living room. Early twenties, jeans, a sweatshirt, hair matted with blood at the temple. A lamp lay smashed in a scatter of glass. A coffee table on its side. Wall photos crooked, some facedown as if embarrassed to look.
“She fell after the loud man,” Maya said in a voice so matter-of-fact it hurt. “She made funny sounds and then stopped.”
“Okay.” I put Maya on a recliner, wrapped the blanket tighter, then slid Scout into the blanket’s fold against her belly so he could keep feeling a heartbeat. “Don’t move, kiddo. Keep Scout warm. That’s your job.”
I pulled on nitrile gloves with my teeth and knelt by the woman. “Elena,” Maya said, as if reading my mind. “Her name is Elena. She’s Mommy.”
“Copy that,” I said, more to the dispatcher than to myself. Elena had a pulse—faint, but steady—and she was breathing shallow on her own. The head wound was bleeding enough to make a mess but it wasn’t pulsing. I folded two clean dish towels from the floor into a compress and held it to her temple. “Elena, you’re safe,” I said, because you always say it even if you’re not sure yet. “Help’s on the way.”