I squeezed his hand tightly.
—“Yes.”
Another lie.
Another necessary one.
At the ER, everything blurred.
More tests.
Another ultrasound.
X-rays.
Then a pediatric surgeon pulled me aside.
She had sharp eyes and a steady voice.
—“We need to operate.”
The ground shifted under me.
—“Surgery?”
—“Yes. The object is lodged in a sensitive part of the intestine. It’s not moving. It’s inflaming the tissue. If we wait, it could perforate.”
I couldn’t catch my breath.
—“What is it?”
She lowered her voice.
—“I can’t confirm until we remove it. But this isn’t typical. We’ve already notified hospital security and social services.”
I blinked.
—“Security?”
—“Ma’am… this may not be an accident.”
That was the moment I thought I might throw up.
Not because of the surgery.
Not even because of the word “perforate.”
But because of the thought I could no longer push away.
Someone had done this to my son.
And that someone… might live in my house.
I signed the consent forms with shaking hands.
Watched them wheel Ethan away.
He looked back once.
—“Don’t leave, Mom.”
—“I’m not going anywhere.”
When the doors closed, I collapsed into a chair.
Time stopped making sense.
Until I saw Mark.
He stood there, jaw tight.
Not scared.
Angry.
—“What did you do?” he snapped. “You took him without telling me?”
For the first time in years… I wasn’t afraid of his tone.
I felt something else.
Cold anger.
—“I brought him because he’s sick. And you refused to listen.”
He glanced around, uneasy when he noticed security nearby.
—“You’re overreacting. It’s probably nothing.”
—“He’s in surgery.”
His expression shifted.
Just for a second.
Not fear.
Alarm.
—“Surgery?” he said too quickly. “Why?”
And that’s when I knew.
A normal father would ask if his son was okay.
Mark asked why.
Like he needed to know what they had found.
Soon, a social worker arrived.
Then security.
They separated us.
Asked questions.
About Ethan’s pain.
About Mark.
About anything unusual.
And as I spoke… memories started lining up.
Ethan crying after a “trip” with his dad.
Mark answering for him.
Late-night vomiting.
Closed doors.
Cash hidden in the study.
And something Ethan once said while playing:
“If you swallow it, Daddy won’t get mad.”
My soul dropped.
I told them everything.
Not long after… police showed up.
Mark was yelling.
—“This is ridiculous! My son is sick and you treat me like a criminal!”
But I could see it now.
He wasn’t afraid for Ethan.
He was afraid for himself.