My son Adrian Miller and his wife Caroline had only been parents for two months, and like most new parents, they looked exhausted all the time. Caroline had dark circles under her eyes, and Adrian barely smiled the way he used to, but they still seemed deeply happy and proud of their baby boy, Ethan.
That Saturday morning, they asked me for a small favor while putting on their coats in the hallway of their quiet suburban home in Ohio.
“Mom, can you watch Ethan for an hour or two while we go to the mall,” Adrian said, sounding hopeful but worn out.
“Of course,” I replied immediately, stepping forward to take my grandson into my arms as Caroline gently kissed his forehead and handed him to me.
The moment the front door closed behind them, the house fell quiet, and then Ethan began to cry in a way that instantly unsettled me.
At first, it sounded like normal fussiness, so I rocked him slowly and hummed an old lullaby I used to sing when Adrian was a baby, but something about the rhythm of his cries felt wrong in a way I could not ignore.
I checked the bottle Caroline had prepared and warmed it carefully, but Ethan refused to drink and cried louder with each passing second, his tiny face turning red as his body stiffened.
“Shh, sweetheart, it’s okay,” I whispered, though my voice trembled as his cries grew sharper and more desperate than anything I remembered from raising children.
He gasped between cries as if he could not catch his breath, and when his body suddenly arched and he let out a piercing scream, my heart dropped with a cold certainty that something was very wrong.
I decided to check his diaper, trying to convince myself it might be something simple, but the moment I lifted his onesie, everything inside me froze.
Just above the diaper line on his lower abdomen was a dark, swollen bruise shaped like fingerprints, deep purple against his fragile skin in a way that could not be explained away.
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