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The Invisible Daughter (Yunice Saunders) novel Chapter 405

Chapter 405 One Last Embrace.

As a doctor, Yunice had witnessed countless moments like this. She held up her phone toward Mr. Gerardo and said, Mr. Gerardo, stay seated. If there’s anything you want to say, say it now. I’ll pass it along to Taylor.

But it was like he couldn’t hear her. His eyes were vacant, his body rigid as he stepped forward, reaching toward her with both hands.

Taylorsweetheartwhere are youwhy won’t you come take me home…. Taylor, is that you? Take me homeI miss your momlet me go home, I haven’t cooked for her in so long

Yunice couldn’t hold it in anymore. Why is it that good people never seem to get good endings? The better the family, the more they were marked for suffering and separation.

Her own fatherhe had been just like that. So kind, and yetgone too soon.

But beyond the sorrow, another thought quickly snapped her back

to the present.

Mr. Gerardocaught in a moment of lucidity before deathwas walking out of the containment zone!

That couldn’t happen. Once a patient lost the ability to think clearly, they posed a severe exposure risk to medical staff.

Yunice quickly set her phone down and tried to coax him back toward the bed.

But Mr. Gerardo couldn’t process her words anymore. His mind was already gone.

Panicking, Yunice glanced around. With no other choice, she tore down the plastic sheeting from the bed and threw it over him.

Wrapped in the plastic, Mr. Gerardo began to thrash violently. HomeI want to go

home!

Taylor! Help your dad! Taylor!

He was tall, and though illness had withered his frame, the sudden surge of strength from his final flare of life made him almost impossible to control.

What a terrifying thing it isdying with unfinished love.

Yunice gritted her teeth, trying to hold him back, but she couldn’t.

His flailing arms nearly tore through her protective gear more than once.

Chapter 405 One Last Embrace

Just as she reached a breaking point, someone suddenly rushed in from behind her, grabbed another sheet of plastic, and looped it around Mr. Gerardo’s arms, enclosing him completely.

He was restrainedtrapped in the cocoon of plastic.

Mr. Gerardo struggled for a moment more, then stopped. He stared straight aheadthen collapsed backward, eyes wide

open.

Yunice stood frozen, staring at the person who was still holding Mr. Gerardo tightlyOwen.

He had used every ounce of strength, his forehead veins bulging.

Corpses were heavy, and a man couldn’t carry one alone.

But Owen gritted his teeth, lifting and dragging Mr. Gerardo back to the bed, wrapping him securely in the plastic sheeting.

Then he turned and looked at Yunice, eyes scanning her protective suit.

Did you get exposed?he asked, voice tense with worry.

Yunice looked at the body on the bedat Mr. Gerardo’s lifeless eyes fixed on the doorway- and quietly shook her head. I don’t think so.

Mr. Gerardo was gone.

From the start of the outbreak until now, not a single patient had recovered.

Their worst fear had happened.

Yunice’s energy drained. Watching strangers die was one thing. Watching someone you knew diesomeone whose story you’d heard, whose loved ones you’d methit differently.

Owen looked at the still body, then turned to Yunice. You need to report this. And we’ve got -to start disinfectingnow.

Yunice nodded. For the first time, she didn’t argue with Owen.

Because she didn’t have the strength to speak.

Mr. Gerardo was placed in a body bag and taken awayfor mass cremation.

Just like everyone else, his family would receive nothing. No letter. No memento.

Nothingexcept a short, blurry video on Yunice’s phone.

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