Monday morning arrived gray and cold.
Daniel barely slept.
Valentina’s drawing sat on his kitchen table all weekend:
the wooden chair,
the violent red crayon marks,
the empty white space around it that somehow felt worse than anything else.
At 7:12 a.m., he walked straight past the front office and into Principal Brooks’ office without knocking.
She looked up sharply from her coffee.
“You can’t just—”
“I’m filing another report.”
Her face hardened instantly.
“Daniel—”
“No.” His voice shook with exhaustion and anger. “A six-year-old child said she was in pain. She’s terrified of going home. And everyone here keeps worrying about lawsuits instead of her.”
Brooks stood slowly.
“You are dangerously close to accusing a parent of abuse without evidence.”
Daniel threw the drawing onto her desk.
“Children are evidence.”
The principal glanced at the paper for less than a second before pushing it aside.
“It’s a chair.”
“It’s fear.”
Her expression cooled.
“You’re emotionally involved. That makes you reckless.”
The words hit harder because part of him feared she was right.
But then he remembered Valentina standing in the doorway whispering:
It hurts.
And suddenly he didn’t care if he sounded reckless.
At 8:03 a.m., Valentina arrived.
The moment she entered Room 12, Daniel noticed two things immediately:
First — she was walking slower than before.
Second — there was a fading yellow bruise near her wrist, partially hidden beneath her sweater cuff.
His stomach turned.
“Good morning, Valentina,” he said gently.
She gave a tiny nod and went straight to the reading corner instead of joining the other children.
No crayons today.
No talking.
Just silence.
Daniel crouched beside her during independent reading time.
“Sweetheart,” he said carefully, “did someone hurt your arm?”
Her eyes instantly filled with panic.
Not sadness.
Panic.
She pulled the sleeve down hard over the bruise.
“I’m not supposed to talk.”
Every nerve in Daniel’s body went cold.
“Who told you that?”
Valentina’s lips trembled.
Then the classroom door opened.
Principal Brooks stepped inside smiling too brightly.
“Mr. Carter? A word please.”
Daniel stood slowly.
Brooks kept smiling until the door shut behind them.
Then her face changed completely.
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