ADVERTISEMENT
I remember that detail clearly—because when your life splits into a before and after, your mind clings to the smallest, strangest things. One of Lily’s socks was inside out. A stain of spaghetti sauce marked one of my shirts. My phone buzzed across the couch with an unknown number, and something inside me tightened before I even answered.crsaid
She told me she was locked in the bathroom at her grandmother’s house. She told me not to be angry. And then she said the sentence that made everything tilt: her grandmother had burned her hands for taking bread.
She said she’d been forced to hold a hot pan as punishment. That “pain teaches thieves.”
I grabbed my keys and called emergency services before I even reached the parking lot. I told them my seven-year-old daughter had burns on her hands. I said it wasn’t an accident.
When I got to the house, her grandmother opened the door calmly, like nothing had happened.
I didn’t wait for permission. I went inside and found Lily curled near the bathroom, still in her pajamas, her face red from crying. Her small hands were raised as if even the air hurt.
I asked who did it.
ADVERTISEMENT