Then Rachel’s voice cut in, sharp and defensive. “We arranged a sitter. Something must have gone wrong.”
“What sitter?” I asked.
Another pause. Longer this time.
No answer.
Detective Harris motioned for the phone. I handed it over.
“This is Detective Harris with Riverside County,” he said. “We are opening an investigation for child endangerment.”
The line went dead.
That evening, social services arrived. Olivia was officially placed under temporary protective care—though I made it clear she would stay with me as long as the hospital allowed.
When I told her she was safe now, she didn’t smile immediately.
“Are they mad at me?” she asked.
“No,” I said carefully. “They made a very bad choice. That’s not your fault.”
She nodded like she understood, but her eyes stayed distant.
By nightfall, the cruise ship had been contacted. Security escorted Daniel and Rachel to the ship’s medical office, then to a private holding room. Their vacation ended somewhere between the Caribbean and a locked door they hadn’t expected.
Detective Harris called again.
“They’re being flown back tomorrow,” he said. “This is going to get complicated.”
“Good,” I replied.
Because I wasn’t finished.
Not even close.
The airport arrival was nothing like I expected.
No shouting. No dramatic breakdown. Just Daniel and Rachel stepping out of the escort van, sunburned, exhausted, and irritated—like they had misplaced luggage instead of a child.
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