A security officer appeared quietly at the end of the hall. Then a woman with a hospital badge that read Tasha Greene, LSW stepped forward holding a clipboard.
“Mr. and Mrs. Hart,” she said. “I need to speak with you.”
Daniel drew himself up. “We’re seeing our son first.”
“Not yet,” Tasha said. “There are some urgent questions that need to be answered.”
“This is insane,” Brooke snapped suddenly. “We brought him to his grandmother’s house for three hours. How do we know what happened there?”
I moved before I thought.
Not to hit her. I wanted to, and that terrified me. But I only took one step forward and said, in a voice so low it made even me shiver, “Be very careful.”
The security officer shifted closer.
Tasha Greene nodded toward a consultation room down the hall. “Please.”
They followed her because they had to.
Daniel looked back at me once over his shoulder, and what I saw on his face was not outrage.
It was panic.
An hour later, after specialists had examined Noah and determined that he would recover with treatment and close follow-up, a detective walked into the family room where I was sitting with my untouched cup of coffee.
She was in her forties, Latina, composed, with the kind of watchful eyes that had probably made a lot of liars uncomfortable over the years.
“Mrs. Hart? I’m Detective Lena Morales with Columbus PD.”
I stood up automatically.
She motioned for me to sit. “You found the injury?”
“Yes.”
She opened a notebook. “Start at the beginning.”
So I did.
I told her about the drop-off. The crying. Brooke telling me not to remove the sleeper unless I had to. The way Noah screamed when I lifted his legs. The discovery. The drive.
Detective Morales did not interrupt much. Only to clarify times and exact words.
When I finished, she asked, “Had you noticed anything concerning before today?”
I thought about it.
Small things surfaced.
Brooke canceling Noah’s pediatric follow-up because she “didn’t feel like dragging him out.” Daniel complaining about diaper prices at dinner like the baby had personally chosen them. A visit two weeks earlier when Noah cried and Brooke rolled her eyes and said, “He always does that when he’s wet,” but then did not change him for nearly half an hour.
At the time I had told myself not to criticize.
Now every memory felt like an accusation.
“I should have paid closer attention,” I whispered.
Detective Morales shut her notebook.
“That isn’t what I asked.”
I looked up.
Her expression softened a fraction.
“People who harm children rely on everyone around them wanting to believe the best,” she said. “That isn’t your crime.”
I closed my eyes.
“My son asked what I did,” I said.
She was quiet for a beat too long.
“Yes,” she said. “We heard.”
I opened my eyes.
“And?”
“And their stories are inconsistent.”
A cold stillness settled over me.
Before I could ask another question, the door opened and Daniel stepped in.
Alone.
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