“Who told you not to say?”
Owen stared at the floor.
“Mom.”
The word landed like stone.
Mason kept his voice calm, though his heart was pounding so hard it felt painful.
“And anyone else?”
Owen nodded once.
“Her friend.”
He did not say boyfriend. He was only six. But Mason knew exactly who he meant.
Mason asked carefully, “Did they tell you what to say if I asked?”
A tiny nod.
“That I was sore.”
“Did they tell you to say it came from playing?”
Another nod.
Owen wiped his face badly with the washcloth and whispered, “She said you’d get mad. She said it would be worse if I told.”
Mason had never hated silence more than he hated it then.
He wanted to storm out of the room. He wanted answers. He wanted the world to rewind one full week and hand his child back untouched and laughing and ordinary.
Instead, he reached out and cupped the side of Owen’s face.
“Listen to me,” he said. “You did nothing wrong. Nothing. You were right to tell me. I am proud of you for telling me.”
For the first time since coming home, Owen leaned into his father’s hand.
That nearly broke Mason apart.
The Call He Knew He Had to Make
When Mason checked his son more carefully, the truth became impossible to deny.
This was not the result of harmless play.
This was not a little tumble in a backyard.
There were signs that this had not happened only once. There were signs of fear far deeper than pain. There was a pattern no loving parent could miss once they truly looked.
Mason stood up so quickly he had to place one hand against the counter to steady himself.
But even then, he stayed calm for Owen.
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