The Call A Child Was Never Supposed To Make
The dispatcher had been doing this work long enough to think she had heard every kind of fear a human voice could carry, because there were nights when callers screamed, afternoons when they cursed, mornings when they spoke so calmly you could tell their mind had slipped into a strange quiet just to keep from breaking, yet on a cold October day, as the wind rattled a thin window somewhere on the other end of the line, a small voice arrived that made her fingers stop above the keyboard as if the keys had turned to ice.
“My baby is fading,” the child whispered, and then the whisper cracked into a sob she tried to swallow, as though she believed even the sound of crying might use up time she could not afford.
The dispatcher softened her voice the way she always did when the caller was little, because softness sometimes gave people room to breathe, and breathing sometimes gave them enough steadiness to answer.
“Honey, tell me your name.”
“Juniper,” the girl said, and her breath hitched like she was running even though she was standing still, “but everyone calls me Juni.”
“Okay, Juni. How old are you?”
“Seven.”
There was a pause, and behind the pause came a thin, strained sound that could only be an infant’s cry, but it was so weak that it sounded like the cry was traveling through cloth and distance and exhaustion.
“Whose baby is it, sweetheart?” the dispatcher asked, keeping her tone gentle while her other hand already moved toward the send button.
Juni answered as if the truth was obvious and heavy at the same time.
“Mine,” she said, and then hurried on, panicked by her own honesty, “I mean—he’s my brother, but I take care of him, and he’s getting lighter every day, and he won’t drink, and I don’t know what else to do.”
The call went out within seconds, because even in a small town, even on a quiet street, that kind of sentence moved faster than any siren.
Leave a Comment