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“Papa… Mommy did something bad, but she warned me that if I told you, things would get much worse. Please help me… my back hurts so much.”
The words didn’t arrive as a scream. They emerged as a fragile whisper—shaky and barely there—drifting from the doorway of a softly colored bedroom in a calm, meticulously kept neighborhood outside Chicago, the sort of place where lawns were cut on schedule and neighbors exchanged polite waves without ever truly connecting.
Aaron Cole stopped cold in the hallway, one hand still gripping the handle of his suitcase. He had been home for barely fifteen minutes—the front door remained unlocked, his jacket tossed where it had fallen. His thoughts had been filled with a single, familiar image: his daughter racing toward him, laughing the way she always did when he returned from business trips, arms outstretched, feet almost skimming the floor.
Instead, he was met with silence. And something far worse—fear.
“Sophie,” Aaron said softly, forcing calm into his voice, even as his heart began to pound. “Hey. I’m here now. You can come to me.”
She stayed perfectly still.