The Call That Made a Corrupt Detective Stop Laughing in the ER-Quieen - Chainityai

The Call That Made a Corrupt Detective Stop Laughing in the ER-Quieen

The smoke reached Mason Vance before the sirens did.

It crawled over the roofs of stalled cars in black ropes, low and heavy, bending under the late afternoon wind like it was trying to stay hidden.

He knew the smell of burning rubber.

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He had smelled it in alley dumpsters behind the grocery store, in overheated brakes, in old engines that coughed too hard in July.

This was different.

This had metal in it.

This had something bitter enough to make his tongue go numb.

Mason left his dented sedan crooked against the curb and ran toward the intersection with his grocery store polo sticking to his back.

The call from Mercy General still echoed in his ear.

“Your little sister was on the bus.”

The nurse had not said more at first.

Hospital people know how to pause in a way that tells you your life is about to split down the middle.

Then the nurse said Laya was alive.

Only survivor.

Two words that should have felt like mercy and instead felt like a sentence he did not know how to serve.

When he reached the police tape, people were standing in clusters with their phones raised and their mouths open.

A woman in a blue cardigan kept repeating, “Oh my God,” under her breath.

A man beside her held both hands over his ears, even though the first horrible sound had already ended.

An ambulance backed over broken glass.

A police cruiser blocked the eastbound lane.

Then Mason saw the bus.

It was on its side in the middle of the road, yellow paint shredded open, smoke breathing out of the engine compartment.

The school district lettering had been scraped by asphalt and heat, but enough of it remained to make his knees weaken.

It was Laya’s bus.

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