My five-year-old daughter always bathed with my husband.

It wasn’t.

The house still existed.

The photos on the walls still existed.

Mark’s folded clothes still existed in drawers I had organized.

Dawn broke without me feeling as though I had lived through the night.

The hospital changes color at dawn.

Everything seems more ordinary, and therefore more cruel.

Sophie finally emerged with a new bracelet on her wrist and a small bag of clothes borrowed from the pediatric ward.

She looked tiny, but strangely alert.

They told her she could come with me, on the condition that she not return home until further notice.

She didn’t ask about her father.

That hurt me in a way that’s hard to describe.

In my sister’s car, when we had barely gone two blocks, Sophie spoke, looking out the fogged-up window.

“Is Dad mad at me?”

I felt my heart break.

Not with me.

Not with the police.

With her.

Even in that, childhood fear chooses the wrong path.

“You didn’t do anything wrong,” I told her. “

Nothing.

None of this is your fault.

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