My four-year-old son called me at work, crying: ‘Daddy, Mommy’s boyfriend hit me with a baseball bat-YILUX

My four-year-old son called me at work, crying: ‘Daddy, Mommy’s boyfriend hit me with a baseball bat-YILUX

There were appointments, conversations, forms, follow-ups, each one adding structure to something that had felt chaotic.

Travis was charged. The process moved forward without drama, just paperwork and dates and statements repeated carefully.

I told the truth every time, even when it made me sound like I had waited too long, even when it was uncomfortable.

That was part of the cost, I realized. Not just what had happened, but what I had allowed to slide before it did.

Lena started showing up consistently, not asking for more than Noah gave, not pushing for normal before it existed again.

Sometimes he sat closer to her. Sometimes he didn’t. She stopped reacting to it either way.

Derek came by often, fixing small things around the apartment that did not really need fixing, just to have something to do.

He never talked about that day unless I brought it up, and even then, he kept his words short, like he did not trust them.

Life did not return to what it was before. It reshaped itself into something quieter, more careful, less certain but more honest.

One evening, a few weeks later, Noah climbed onto my lap while we were watching a cartoon he barely paid attention to.

“Dad,” he said, tracing a small circle on my shirt with his finger.

“Yeah?”

“You didn’t let him hurt me again.”

It was not a question. It was a statement, simple and direct.

I swallowed before answering, because there were many ways to respond, and only one that felt true enough.

“I should’ve stopped it sooner,” I said.

He thought about that, his brow furrowing slightly, then relaxed again.

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