Dad said, “We’ll handle this at home,” after another fight with my sister sent me to the emergency room.

PART 2

Angela Moore did not hurry me.

She asked one question at a time, recording everything in a small blue notebook while Detective Nolan stood near the foot of the bed.

I expected them to interrupt, question me, or tell me every family had difficulties.

That was what school counselors had said when I tried to suggest that something was wrong.

But Angela only listened.

I told her everything.

How the trouble with Brittany had started when I was twelve.

At first, it was shoving me aside, locking me outside on the back porch in winter, hiding my homework, and finding new ways to make me feel afraid inside my own home.

My parents brushed it off as sibling rivalry.

As the years went on, the situation grew worse.

Arguments often ended with me being hurt, while everyone insisted I had somehow caused it.

Mom always chose the explanation that was easiest to believe.

Dad did more than believe it.

He protected Brittany.

“Brittany has anxiety,” he always said. “You know not to set her off.”

So I learned to move quietly.

I waited until everyone else had eaten before I took food.

I wore long sleeves even during summer.

Most of all, I learned that in our house, the person who got hurt was expected to keep the peace.

Detective Nolan asked,

“Has your sister hurt anyone else?”

I hesitated.

Angela’s pen stopped moving.

“Yes,” I said.

“Our neighbor’s dog. Two years ago.”

Detective Nolan looked at me.

“What happened?”

“Brittany said it wouldn’t stop barking. After it disappeared, everyone was told it must have wandered off.”

Angela became very still.

“Did your parents know?”

“They knew,” I whispered.

“Dad asked me to repeat the same story.”

The curtain suddenly slid open.

Dad stood there with a security officer only a few steps behind him.

“This interview is over,” he snapped.

“She’s medicated. She’s confused.”

Detective Nolan moved between us.

“Mr. Whitaker, leave the room.”

“I’m her father.”

“And right now you’re interfering with an investigation.”

Mom was crying in the hallway.

Brittany kept saying I was destroying her life.

But something had already shifted.

The truth was no longer locked inside our house.

It was written in Angela’s notebook.

It was visible in the medical findings.

It was recorded in the doctor’s report.

That evening, CPS placed me in emergency protective custody while the investigation continued.

I was not allowed to go back home.

As Angela pushed my wheelchair toward the hospital entrance, I saw my father standing near the doors, watching me as though I had betrayed him.

For the first time in years, I did not look away.

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