The hospital called and said a little boy had listed me as his emergency contact. I laughed nervously and said, “That’s impossible. I’m 32, single, and I don’t have a son.”

The hospital phoned to say a young boy had named me as his emergency contact. I gave a nervous laugh and replied, “That’s impossible. I’m 32, single, and I don’t have a son.” But when they said he wouldn’t stop asking for me, I got in my car… and the second I stepped into his room, everything in my world came to a halt… The call came at 11:38 on a Tuesday night. I nearly ignored it—I was in my kitchen in Portland, Oregon, barefoot, worn out, trying to convince myself cereal qualified as dinner. Unknown numbers after ten usually meant spam or a coworker forgetting boundaries. Still, something made me pick up.

“Is this Ms. Nora Ellison?” a woman asked.

“Yes.”

“This is St. Agnes Medical Center. We have a boy here. Your name is listed as his emergency contact.”

I stared at the phone, then pressed it tighter to my ear. “I’m sorry, what?”

“A minor. Male. About eleven years old. His name is Oliver.”

“I don’t have a son,” I said slowly. “I’m thirty-two and single. You must have the wrong Nora Ellison.”

There was a pause. Papers shuffled faintly. Then the nurse lowered her voice. “He keeps asking for you. Just come.”

My stomach knotted. “Who gave him my number?”

“We’re still trying to determine that. He was brought in after a traffic accident near Burnside. He’s conscious, but frightened. He has your full name, phone number, and address written on a card in his backpack.”

I gripped the edge of the counter. “Is he badly hurt?”

“Stable. Some bruises, a mild concussion, and a fractured wrist. But he won’t answer questions unless we call you.”

I should have refused. I should have told them to contact child services, the police—anyone else. But a child was asking for me by name from a hospital bed, and I couldn’t just ignore that.

Twenty minutes later, I walked into St. Agnes with damp hair, mismatched socks, and a heart pounding so hard I felt it in my throat. A nurse named Maribel met me at the desk.

“Thank you for coming,” she said. “He’s in room twelve. Before you go in, I need to ask—do you recognize the name Oliver Vance?”

“No.”

“Do you know a woman named Rachel Vance?”

The name hit like ice water. I hadn’t heard it in twelve years. Rachel had been my college roommate, my closest friend—and eventually the person who disappeared from my life after one terrible night, one accusation, and a silence we never repaired.

“I knew her,” I whispered.

Maribel studied me. “Oliver says she’s his mother.”

My knees nearly gave way. I followed her down the hall.

In room twelve, a small boy sat upright in bed, his left wrist wrapped, dark hair clinging to his forehead. His face was pale, his lip split, and his eyes—wide, scared, painfully familiar—locked onto mine the instant I entered.

For a moment, neither of us spoke. Then he whispered, “Nora?”

My mouth went dry. “Yes.”

His chin trembled. “Mom said if anything bad happened, I had to find the lady with two eyes…”

Part 2

I stood frozen in the doorway, convinced I had misheard. “The lady with two eyes?” I repeated.

Oliver nodded, tears gathering but not falling. “She said you were the only person who ever saw both sides of her.”

The words settled deep inside me. Rachel.

At nineteen, Rachel Vance had been the brightest person I knew. She could turn a bad diner into an adventure, a failed exam into a comedy act, and a rainy night into a reason to dance barefoot in the dorm parking lot. But she also carried shadows she never named—days when she vanished, weeks when her laughter rang too loud, bruises she explained too quickly.

I had seen both sides—the charming girl everyone adored and the frightened one who cried in the laundry room because her boyfriend, Mark, had “only grabbed her arm.” I begged her to leave him. She begged me not to interfere.

Then, senior year, I called campus security after hearing screaming from her room. Rachel told everyone I had exaggerated. Mark called me jealous. Our friends chose comfort over truth. Rachel moved out two days later and never spoke to me again.

Now her son was looking at me like I was the last piece of a map.

I stepped closer. “Oliver, where is your mom?”

VA

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