My daughter called me in the middle of the night.
“Dad, I’m at the police station. My stepfather beat me, but now he’s telling them that I attacked him. They believe him.”
When I arrived at the station, the officer on duty turned pale and, stammering, said, “I’m sorry.
I didn’t know.”
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The phone rang at 3:17 a.m. on a Thursday in late October, the kind of night when the air is sharp enough to cut glass and the moon hangs low like a warning.
I was already half awake, the way parents learned to be when their children no longer live under the same roof, when every creek in the house could be a footstep or a heartbeat.
The ringtone was Emily’s favorite pop song, Sunflower Skies by Nova Ray, slowed to a haunting piano version she’d set years ago back when she was 15 and convinced the world would end if her playlist wasn’t perfect. My hand found the phone in the dark, thumbs swiping before my eyes adjusted to the screen. The caller ID glowed: “Emmy Bear.”
“Dad,” she whispered, voice trembling like a leaf caught in a storm, barely audible over what sounded like fluorescent lights buzzing in the background.
“I’m at the police station. My stepfather beat me, but now he’s telling them that I attacked him. They believe him.”
The words hit like ice water poured straight into my veins, shocking every nerve awake.
I was already pulling on jeans, one-handed, the phone pressed to my ear with my shoulder. “Stay calm, M. I’m coming.
Don’t say another word until I’m there. Not one. Do you hear me?”
“I I tried to fight back, but he’s bigger.
And the officers, they looked at me like I was the problem.” A sob broke through, raw and ragged. “There’s blood on my hoodie, Dad. My hoodie.
Please hurry.”
The line went dead.
I stared at the screen. 3:19 a.m. Then grabbed my keys, wallet, and the old leather jacket I hadn’t worn since the academy, the one with the frayed cuffs and the faint scent of gun oil still trapped in the lining.
My truck roared to life before I even closed the door.
The drive to the Midtown precinct took 23 minutes on empty streets, though every red light felt like a personal insult, every shadow on the road a taunt. My mind raced faster than the engine. Richard.
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