A retired surgeon raced to the ER after one late-night call, but the message carved across his daughter’s back proved the real danger was still inside the family.-luna

The name on the intake form was written in block letters, dark and hurried.

Evelyn Carter.

For a moment, I thought age had finally caught up with me.

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I blinked hard, expecting the letters to rearrange into something ordinary.

They did not.

Robert watched my face change.

“You know her,” he said.

It was not a question.

I looked back at Allison, still face down beneath the harsh ER lights, the torn fabric trapped in her fist.

“I knew her,” I said.

My voice sounded like it belonged to someone standing across the room.

Evelyn Carter had been a nurse at Cedar Heights Memorial nearly thirty years earlier.

She was sharp, quiet, steady under pressure, the kind of nurse surgeons trusted before they trusted themselves.

She had also vanished from my life after one terrible summer.

A summer I had spent pretending I did not owe anyone an explanation.

Robert lowered his voice.

“She came in with Allison.”

I turned to him.

“What do you mean, she came in with her?”

“She rode in the ambulance. Told the paramedics she found Allison behind the old Bennett property.”

The Bennett property.

Lucas’ family owned thirty acres outside town, past the last strip mall and the gas station with the broken ice machine.

There was an old farmhouse there, white paint peeling, barn leaning sideways, long gravel drive swallowing every sound.

Allison had told me they were restoring it.

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