“I found a bruise on him,” I said slowly. “A bad one.”
Another pause.
Then I heard Megan in the background
Noah’s tiny body trembled in my arms as he cried, his face red and wet with tears. I could barely breathe. My mind kept repeating the same horrifying thought: Someone had hurt my grandson.
The bruise was unmistakable. Dark purple. Slightly swollen. And shaped in a way that made my stomach twist — the faint outline of fingers pressed too hard against delicate skin.
My hands shook so badly I had to steady myself against the changing table.
“Who did this to you?” I whispered, my voice barely more than air.
Noah screamed again, louder this time, a cry so desperate it made my heart ache.
That was it.
I didn’t think about anything else. Not coats. Not shoes. Not calling my son.
I grabbed the nearest blanket, wrapped Noah carefully, and rushed out of the house.
The Drive
The drive to the hospital felt like the longest fifteen minutes of my life.
Noah cried almost the entire way. Every few seconds I reached back from the driver’s seat to touch his little leg, whispering reassurances even though he couldn’t understand.
“It’s okay, sweetheart… Grandma’s here.” n9al
But inside, I was terrified.
I had raised Daniel. I knew what bruises looked like. Kids fall, they bump into things. But babies? Two-month-old babies don’t bruise like that.
Especially not fingerprints.
My mind raced through possibilities, each worse than the last.
Had he fallen somehow?
Had someone dropped him?
Or…
No.
I forced the thought away.
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