In the emergency room, they took us through a side door.
Everything was quick, but not abrupt.
They separated us for a few minutes, and that was another moment that almost broke me.
She started crying as soon as a nurse tried to take her away.
She didn’t yell “Mommy.”
She yelled “Don’t leave me,” and I felt that phrase pierce me like glass.
I wanted to tell them not to touch her.
I wanted to stay with her on the stretcher, shut out the world, cancel procedures, turn back time by a week, a month, five years.
But the social worker met my gaze and said something simple:
“Helping you can also feel like hurting you for a while.
Don’t let that confuse you.”
I sat alone in a beige hallway with an untouched cup of coffee.
I thought about calling my mother, but I couldn’t.
I thought about calling a friend, but I was too embarrassed.
I’m not ashamed of Sophie.
I’m ashamed of myself.
For not seeing it sooner.
For defending so many times a man who was now being questioned by police.
Perfect mothers exist only in the judgments of others.
Real mothers arrive late to devastating truths and then must keep breathing as if that were also an obligation.
A detective arrived around midnight.
He didn’t seem tough.
That threw me off.
I was expecting a steely voice, but he carried a folded notebook and had dark circles under his eyes like mine.
He asked me to start with the everyday, not with the worst suspicion.
So I talked about clocks, towels, smells, secrets, tiredness, phrases, minimal gestures, inexplicable fears that I filed away.
As I spoke, my story sounded ridiculous to me at times.