A little girl called emergency services and said, “My dad and his friend did it” — what she revealed stunned everyone and brought them to tears.
Nina Cortez had been an emergency dispatcher in Cedarwood County for fifteen years, responding to every kind of crisis: he.art a.tta.cks, traffic accidents, storms. Yet nothing had prepared her for the call at 2:17 p.m. that September Tuesday.
“911, what’s your emergency?” she asked in her calm, practiced tone.
A pause. Then a trembling voice, barely audible through sobs:
“It was my dad and his friend. Please, help me.”
Nina’s fingers hovered over the keyboard, heart tightening. “Are you okay, honey? Can you tell me your name?”
“My name is Lucia Alvarez. I’m eight. My tummy… it really hurts. It’s so big now and it keeps getting bigger.” She could hear cartoons playing, no adult voices in the house.
“Where are your parents?” Nina asked softly.
“My mom… she’s asleep. Her body… she’s fighting it again. My dad’s at work,” Lucia answered, fear and pain in her voice. “I think what they gave me made me sick.” Nina stayed calm, signaling her supervisor.
“What do you mean they gave you something?”
“Food and water… but after that, my stomach hurt terribly,” the little girl said, her breathing quick and shallow.
“And now nobody will take me to the doctor?” Nina confirmed she understood, dispatching Officer Javier Ortega immediately to the tracked address. “Lucia, can you see out the window? A police officer is coming. His name is Officer Javier Ortega, and he’s very kind.”
Nina heard her footsteps over the line, then a soft exhale.
“The patrol car is here! He’s going to help me,” Lucia whispered.
“That’s right, Lucia. Stay with me and open the door for Officer Javier. He’s here to take care of you.”
Officer Javier approached the modest single-story house on Willow Creek Heights, preparing for the situation he was about to encounter.
