“No,” I whispered. “She hasn’t said anything. She barely talks lately.”

Principal Morris slid a folder across the desk. Inside were anonymized notes—stories that were horrifyingly similar. Children describing a man with a staff badge telling them they had “stains” or “smelled,” guiding them to a side bathroom near the gym, handing them paper towels, sometimes tugging at their clothes “to check.” He warned them, “If your parents find out, you’ll get in trouble.”

I felt sick. “That’s grooming,” I said, my voice shaking.

Ms. Reyes nodded. “We believe so.”

I forced myself to breathe. “Why wasn’t this stopped sooner?”

Principal Morris’s eyes filled. “We suspended him yesterday while investigating. But we didn’t have physical evidence. The kids were scared. Some parents assumed it was about hygiene. We needed something concrete.”

I looked down at the fabric again, my throat burning. “So Sophie was trying to wash it away.”

Ms. Reyes spoke softly. “Children often bathe immediately after something invasive because they feel contaminated. It’s not about being dirty. It’s about trying to regain control.”

Tears spilled before I could stop them. “What do you need from me?”

Principal Morris replied, “We want to speak with Sophie today, with you present, somewhere safe. Law enforcement has already been contacted.”

My hands clenched. “Where is she right now?”

“In class,” Ms. Reyes said. “We’ll bring her here. But please—don’t interrogate her. Let her speak in her own time. Safety comes first.”

When Sophie entered the office, she looked so small in her uniform, her hair still slightly damp from her morning shower. She saw me and immediately looked down, as if she already understood.

I took her hand. “Sweetheart,” I whispered, “you’re not in trouble. I just need you to tell me the truth.”

Her lip trembled. She nodded once.

Then she whispered the sentence that silenced the room:

“He said if I didn’t wash, you would smell it on me.”

My heart shattered and hardened all at once.

“Sophie,” I said gently, “who said that?”

She squeezed my fingers painfully tight. “Mr. Keaton,” she whispered. “The man by the side door.”

Ms. Reyes kept her voice calm. “What did he mean by ‘smell it’?”