David looked at Lily with new respect. “If Judge Westbrook believed in you, then maybe I should too. Doctor, isn’t there some way this child can see the judge?”
Dr. Harrison looked conflicted. “Even if I wanted to allow it, which goes against all hospital policy, Judge Westbrook is unconscious. She wouldn’t even know the child was there.”
“But I would know,” Lily said firmly. “And Judge Catherine’s spirit would know too, even if her sleeping body doesn’t.”
An elderly woman who had been sitting quietly in the corner spoke up. “Doctor, what harm could it do, if the judge doesn’t wake up soon anyway?” She didn’t finish the sentence, but her meaning was clear.
Dr. Harrison looked around the waiting room at all the hopeful faces staring back at him. He had been a doctor for 30 years, and he had always believed in science and medicine above everything else. But sometimes, in cases like this, science wasn’t enough.
“Five minutes,” he said finally. “The child can have five minutes with Judge Westbrook. But that’s all, and there have to be adults with her.”
Robert squeezed Lily’s hand. “Are you sure about this, sweetheart?”
Lily looked up at her father with those wise green eyes. “Daddy, do you remember what mommy used to say about the hardest times?”
Robert’s eyes filled with tears as he remembered his wife’s words. “She used to say that the hardest times are when miracles happen, because that’s when people need them the most.”
“That’s right,” Lily said, smiling. “And Judge Catherine needs a miracle right now more than she’s ever needed anything.”
Dr. Harrison led them down a long white hallway to the intensive care unit. The room was quiet except for the sound of machines beeping and humming.
Judge Catherine lay in the hospital bed, looking smaller and more fragile than Robert had ever seen her. Tubes and wires connected her to various machines, and her face was pale and still.
“She looks so peaceful,” Lily whispered, walking up to the bed without any fear.
Robert stayed back near the door with Dr. Harrison, watching nervously as his daughter approached the unconscious judge.
Lily climbed up onto a chair beside the bed so she could be at the same level as Judge Catherine. She looked at the judge’s still face for a long moment, then gently placed her small hand on Catherine’s arm.
“Hello, Judge Catherine,” Lily said softly. “I know you can’t hear me with your ears right now, but I’m hoping you can hear me with your heart.”
The machines continued their steady beeping, but Judge Catherine didn’t move.
“I know you’re scared,” Lily continued, her voice gentle and loving. “When you fell down at the park, it reminded you of your car accident, didn’t it? It made you remember how scary it was when your body got hurt, and now your spirit is hiding again.”
Dr. Harrison watched in amazement as this little girl talked to his patient as if she were having a normal conversation.
“But Judge Catherine, I need you to remember something important,” Lily said, stroking the judge’s arm gently. “Do you remember how it felt when we were dancing by the duck pond? Do you remember how light and happy you felt? That happiness is still inside you. It’s just hiding because it’s scared.”
Robert held his breath as he watched his daughter pour her heart out to the unconscious woman.
“Your spirit isn’t broken, Judge Catherine, it’s just lost in a dark place, like being lost in a forest at night. But I can see the path back to the light, and I’m going to help guide you home.”
Lily closed her eyes and placed both of her small hands on Judge Catherine’s arm. The room seemed to fill with a warm, golden light, though Robert wasn’t sure if he was really seeing it or just feeling it.
“Can you see the path, Judge Catherine?” Lily whispered. “It’s made of all the beautiful memories you’ve forgotten. There’s the memory of you dancing as a little girl. There’s the memory of your first day as a judge, when you were so excited to help people. There’s the memory of us feeding the ducks and laughing together.”
Dr. Harrison looked at the monitors connected to Judge Catherine. Her heart rate, which had been slow and irregular, began to steady and strengthen.
“That’s it,” Lily said encouragingly. “You’re following the path back to the light. You’re remembering who you really are, not just a judge in a wheelchair, but a whole person full of love and hope and dreams.”
Judge Catherine’s fingers began to twitch slightly.
“She’s responding,” Dr. Harrison whispered in amazement…
