I bathed her that night as gently as if she were made of glass, using a washcloth instead of having her sit fully in the water, because even the softest touch made her tense. Afterward, dressed in one of Lily’s oversized sleep shirts, she followed my five-year-old daughter to the guest room and climbed into bed beside her with the exhausted relief of someone who had held fear inside her body for far too long.
I should have slept after that.
Instead, I sat at the kitchen table with my husband, Aaron, and told him everything.
He listened without interrupting, his face going still in the way it always did when he was furious but forcing himself to stay grounded in the facts.
When I finished, he said, — We call a doctor first thing in the morning, and we call the authorities right after that. No delays, no family discussions, no warnings. —
I nodded, because by then the truth was painfully clear.
This was no longer a family issue.
It was a child protection emergency.
The next morning, Sophie was examined by a pediatric specialist trained to identify signs of abuse. Every bruise, every welt, every old and new mark was photographed and documented while I held her hand and answered questions she was too frightened to face herself.
The doctor’s expression told me what the report would later confirm: this had not happened once.
It had happened again and again.
A social worker arrived before noon.
By late afternoon, an investigator had already begun asking about Sophie’s father, the home environment, and whether anyone else in the family might have suspected something was wrong.
That last question lingered with me the longest, because I couldn’t stop thinking about my sister in the hospital—exhausted, vulnerable, preparing to welcome a newborn while unaware that the child she had left behind had been living in quiet fear.
I dreaded telling her.
Almost as much as I feared the possibility that she might already know more than she had allowed herself to admit.
I visited her that evening alone.
She looked pale and fragile in the hospital bed, her newborn son sleeping in a clear bassinet nearby. For one impossible moment, I wished I could let her remain in that small pocket of calm just a little longer.
But truth does not become gentler with delay.
So I sat beside her and told her what Sophie had said, what the doctor had found, and why child services had already stepped in.
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