
My Husband Saved Her Cat While My Father Bled to Death
Chapter 3
The call came at 11:47 PM.
"Your father's hurt," the voice said. Male. Tired. "You need to get to Manhattan General. Now."
I was already moving. Phone pressed to my ear, bare feet on cold marble, grabbing keys from the kitchen counter. "How hurt? What happened?"
"Just get here."
The line went dead.
Clyde wasn't home. Some late meeting. I didn't call him. Didn't text. I just ran.
The elevator felt like it took hours. My hands shook as I pressed the garage button. The car started on the second try. I drove through empty streets with my heart hammering against my ribs, running red lights, not caring.
Dad was hurt. Dad needed me.
That was all that mattered.
Manhattan General rose up ahead of me like a fortress. All glass and steel and blazing white light. I pulled into the emergency entrance and abandoned the car in a no-parking zone. Let them tow it. Let them fine me. I didn't care.
I ran toward the automatic doors.
They didn't open.
I stopped. Pressed my palms against the glass. The doors stayed shut. Beyond them, I could see the emergency room — bright, sterile, busy. Nurses moving between curtained areas. Doctors in white coats. Life happening.
But the doors wouldn't open.
A security guard appeared on the other side. Big man in a black uniform. He looked at me through the glass and shook his head.
"Please!" I pounded on the door. "My father's coming here. He's hurt. I need to get in."
The guard pointed to a sign taped to the glass. Handwritten. Sloppy. "Emergency entrance temporarily closed for VIP medical procedure. Use main entrance."
I stared at the sign. Read it twice.
VIP medical procedure.
At 11:47 at night.
In the emergency room.
I ran around the building. The main entrance was six blocks away. Six blocks through a maze of hospital wings and parking structures. My lungs burned. My feet were bleeding in my thin slippers. But I kept running.
When I finally burst through the main doors, I was gasping. The lobby was nearly empty. One receptionist behind a desk, typing slowly.
"Jack Williamson," I said. "My father. He's coming here. Emergency."
She looked at her computer. Typed. Frowned. "I don't see anything."
"Check again. Please. Someone called me. Said he was hurt."
More typing. A longer pause.
"Ma'am, I'm showing an ambulance was dispatched to Rikers, but it hasn't arrived here yet."
My blood went cold. "How long ago?"
"Forty-three minutes."
Forty-three minutes. The hospital was twenty minutes from Rikers. Even with traffic.
Even with traffic.
"Where is he?"
She called someone. Spoke in low tones. Hung up.
"The ambulance is... delayed. They're requesting immediate emergency access, but the entrance is blocked for a priority procedure."
I felt something snap inside my chest. "What procedure?"
"I can't disclose—"
"What procedure?"
She looked at her screen. Her face changed. "Veterinary emergency. A cat."
The words hit me like a physical blow.
A cat.
My father was bleeding somewhere in the back of an ambulance, and they were treating a cat.
I ran. Back through the lobby, back through the maze, back to the emergency entrance. The security guard was still there. Still shaking his head.
But now I could see past him.
In the center of the emergency room, under the brightest lights, a small examination table had been set up. A veterinarian in scrubs leaned over something white and fluffy. Snowball. Estelle's cat.
And there, standing beside the table in her cream cashmere coat, was Estelle herself. Her face was streaked with tears. Her hands fluttered over the cat like it was dying.
Behind her, in an expensive suit, stood Clyde.
My husband.
Watching a veterinarian treat a cat's scratched paw while my father bled to death in an ambulance that couldn't get through the door.
I pressed my face against the glass. I screamed his name.
Clyde looked up. Our eyes met through the window.
For a moment, his face was blank. Confused. Like he was trying to remember who I was.
Then he turned back to Estelle and her cat.
I slid down the glass door and sat on the concrete. My phone buzzed.
A text from the same number that had called me.
"I'm sorry. He didn't make it."
Inside the emergency room, Snowball meowed softly as the vet applied a tiny bandage to her paw.
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