For a brief moment, I was out of breath.
The hallway of our house suddenly felt too quiet, too narrow, as if it could not contain the words my daughter had just shared. It wasn’t exactly what he said, but how he said it. Careful. With hesitation. As if even talking could cause worse.
I forced myself to stay calm.
Not because I felt calm, because I wasn’t. My heart was beating hard. But the way he slightly removed my hand told me everything I needed to know: at that moment, I needed more than anything security.
So I kept crouching, at their height.
With a soft voice. No sudden moves.
“You did well to tell me,” I said sweetly.
He didn’t look at me. His fingers twisted the edge of his shirt over and over again, as if trying to hold back.
I was only eight years old.
You shouldn’t have to wonder if telling the truth is safe.
But at that moment, I realized something that changed everything:
The life I thought we had was not real.
Because whatever had been happening,
It didn’t start today.
“How long have you been like this?” I asked carefully.
He hesitated. —Since yesterday.
Did you tell your mother?
“He nodded slightly.
“And what did he tell you?”
He said he was exaggerating.
That word got engraved.
Not out loud. Not violent.
But heavy.
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