A Father Heard Music During His Daughter’s Surgery Crisis-nga9999 - Chainityai

A Father Heard Music During His Daughter’s Surgery Crisis-nga9999

At 11:38 p.m., Ernest Aguilar walked into St. Lucia Medical Center with a private flight still wrinkled into his black suit and a fear he refused to let show on his face.

The automatic doors breathed open in front of him.

The lobby smelled like disinfectant, old coffee, and rainwater tracked in from the sidewalk.

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Somewhere behind the intake desk, a printer clicked and hummed.

Somewhere deeper in the hospital, a monitor kept beeping with the cold patience of a machine that did not care who was rich, who was powerful, or who had spent forty years making other men afraid.

Ernest was seventy-two years old.

His white hair was combed back, his eyes were pale and sharp, and his name still made bankers lower their voices in rooms from New York to Miami.

He had bought failing companies before their founders understood they were already dead.

He had saved banks when saving them gave him leverage.

He had destroyed competitors without raising his voice.

But none of that mattered when he stepped into the ICU and saw his daughter lying beneath hospital lights.

Valentina Aguilar was thirty-four years old.

To newspapers and society pages, she was elegant, educated overseas, and heir to a family empire worth hundreds of millions.

To her father, she was still the little girl who used to climb into his office chair, wrap ribbons around his neckties, and laugh because he looked “too serious to be a dad.”

She had once fallen asleep under his desk during a late merger call because she did not want to go home without him.

She had once taped a crooked drawing of the two of them to his briefcase so he would “remember who loved him most” before a board fight.

She had trusted love the way Ernest trusted paperwork.

That had always frightened him.

Now she lay in an ICU bed with a ventilator breathing for her.

Her head was wrapped in bandages.

Her skin looked almost blue beneath the fluorescent glare.

The heart monitor beside her bed kept making the same steady sound, each beep landing inside Ernest’s chest like a small verdict.

He stood there for several seconds without speaking.

His eyes moved from her face to the tubes, from the tubes to the IV pole, from the IV pole to the chair beside her bed.

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