She’s been very stressed.
I don’t know what she told you, but there’s a simple explanation.”
Sophie clung to me tighter.
She buried her face in my hair, hiding from her father’s voice.
The paramedic noticed before anyone else and reached out to us.
“Let’s sit down, okay?” he murmured, without touching her yet.
I knew that was the decisive moment, the one that would split my life in two.
I could hesitate, ask for time, talk privately, remain prudent and reasonable.

Or I could say aloud what my body had already understood before my head.
I could abandon forever the comfortable possibility of being wrong.
“My daughter told me her father asks her to keep secrets in the bathroom,” I said.
The words came out flat, almost dry.
Inside, I felt like my throat was being ripped out.
Nobody spoke for two seconds.
Not the officers.
Not Mark.
Not me.