I sprinted down the hospital corridor with a kind of desperation that erased dignity. The fluorescent lights blurred overhead, the sharp scent of antiseptic burning my lungs as I repeated the words from the phone call in my mind: critical head injury, unconscious, come immediately. The voice had sounded urgent but oddly controlled, as if rehearsed. I hadn’t questioned it. I hadn’t questioned how they got my number or why Logan’s assistant hadn’t called instead. I simply reacted. That’s what love does sometimes—it overrides logic. Logan Pierce was not just my husband; he was the axis my life rotated around for twelve years.
We had built everything carefully: a restored townhouse, shared accounts, carefully planned vacations, even a dog we both pretended we didn’t spoil. So when someone said he had fallen down a flight of stairs at his office and might not wake up, I drove through red lights. I abandoned rational thought. I rushed into the surgical wing calling his name. That’s when the nurse stopped me. She was tall, her expression tight and urgent in a way that felt wrong for someone delivering bad news.